Matchday 3 of the 2018 FIFA World Cup is here. In this third and final match of the group stage, both teams in each group will play simultaneously. This help prevent match fixing by teams and players, stemming back to an incident during the 1982 World Cup.
In the final match of group play that year, Germany and Austria played each other. Algeria was also in their group and had won their third match the day prior. A win by Austria or a draw would have seen Austria and Algeria advance. But a win by Germany would have sent Germany and Austria through.
Germany took a 1-0 lead early in the match. After that, both the Austirans and the Germans merely passed the ball around with no apparent desire to score. It was a lazy match that resulted in boos and the subsequent scheduling change.
Saudi Arabia 2 – 1 Egypt
Mathematically, both Saudi Arabia and Egypt cannot advance past the group stage. But neither team let up. In the dying seconds of stoppage time, Saudi Arabia got a late goal to get their first World Cup win since 1994.
Mohamed Salah got Egypt on the board in the 22nd minute. After receiving a long ball, he toe-poked it over the keeper from the top of the box. Saudi Arabia were awarded two penalties in the first half. The first was saved by Essam El-Hadary. The second was well placed at the close of the first 45 minutes. The two are tied at the half.
The two sides continued to battle back and forth until literally the last minute. Never letting up, Salem Al Dawsari found a cross and one-timed a shot just past the Egyptian keeper for the game winner.
While both teams were eliminated, Saudi Arabia leaves Russia with a bit more pride from the victory. Egypt returns home still winless in World Cup play.
Goals
- 22' - Mohamed Salah (EGY)
- 45' +6'- Salman Al Faraj (RSA)
- 90' +5' - Salem Al Dawsari (RSA)
Cards
- 5'- Ali Gabr (EGY)
- 86' - Ahmed Fathi(EGY)
Full match recap, live blog and highlights
- Saudi Arabia vs. Egypt live blog (CBS Sports)
Uruguay 3 – 0 Russia
Uruguay wins Group A, will face Portugal
Uruguay won all three of their group stage matches and wins Group A. They will play the Group B runner-up, which will be determined after the late matches today.
Uruguay started off strong as Luis Suarez got his second of the World Cup in the 10th minute. After a Yuri Gazinskly yellow card gave Uruguay a free kick just outside the box, they pulled off a brilliant set piece. Movement on the wall got the Russian defenders to move leaving Suarez a clear shot directly on goal. He buried it in the bottom corner.
Diego Laxalt took a corner kick rebound from distance which got a lucky deflection from a Russian defender to put Uruguay up by two.
Russian defender Igor Smolnikov could not keep up with the Uruguay attack. He tackled Matías Vecino a bit too aggressively, earning a yellow card. But then hauled down Laxalt just nine minutes later for a second yellow and an ejection. At halftime, Russia was down two goals and also down a man.
After a 90th minute corner kick shot was blocked by Russian keeper, Edinson Cavani beat Luis Suarez to the rebound to put the icing on the cake for Uruguay. They won easily, 3-0, and will now face the runner up of Group B in the knockout stage.
With the loss, Russia finishes second in Group A and will play the Group B winner.
Goals
- 10' - Luis Suarez (URU)
- 23' - Denis Cheryshev (URU)
- 90' - Edinson Cavani (URU)
Cards
- 9' - Yuri Gazinskiy (RUS)
- 27' - Igor Smolnikov (RUS)
- 36' - Igor Smolnikov (RUS)
- 36' - Igor Smolnikov, RED (RUS)
- 59' - Rodrigo Bentancur (URU)
Full match recap, live blog and highlights
- Uruguay vs. Russia live blog (CBS Sports)
Iran 1 – 1 Portugal
Portugal advances as Group B runner-up.
Iran had the change to go through today with a win. Despite multiple chances, they just couldn't pull ahead. In the end, they had to settle for a draw and will now exit the 2018 World Cup as Portugal and Spain advance.
Portugal needed the entirety of the first half to get on the scoreboard and took a 1-0 lead going into the half. It took Iran the next 48 minutes to recover. Halfway through stoppage time, they were awarded a penalty. Karin Ansarifard took it well, earning the draw for Iran.
Goals
- 45' - Ricardo Quaresma (POR)
- 90' +3'- Karim Ansarifard (IRN)
Cards
- 33' - Raphael Guerreiro (POR)
- 52' - Ehsan Hajsafi (IRA)
- 54' - Sardar Azmoun (IRA)
- 64' - Ricardo Quaresma (POR)
- 83'- Cristiano Ronaldo (POR)
Full match recap, live blog and highlights
2018 Fifa World Cup Table Chart
- Iran vs. Portugal live blog (CBS Sports)
Spain 2 – 2 Morocco
Spain wins Group B on the total goals scored tiebreaker
Despite being mathematically eliminated, Morocco played with heart and went after Spain hard. Morocco had the lead twice and held their second lead into stoppage time. Spain managed to tie it up with a last minute goal to earn the draw and hold on to one point in the standings.
Morocco took the lead in the 14th minute. Poor passing in the back led to a Morocco turnover. Khalid Boutaib wasted no time cutting in behind one-on-one with The Spanish keeper DeGea. Boutaib made no mistake shooting the ball through DeGea's legs for the opening goal.
Spain reclaimed the lead just 5 minutes later with much better passing. Iniesta had the assist as Isco finished with precision.
In the 81st minute, Morocco re-took the lead off a corner kick and looked headed for an upset.
But Spain came back with a free kick in stoppage time. Initially called on the offside, The video assistant referee overturned the inital call, noting the Iago Aspas was, in fact, onside for Spain. That goal made it 2-2. Spain stole a last-minute draw to win the group.
Goals
- 14' - Khalid Boutaib (MAR)
- 19' - Isco (ESP)
- 81' - Youssef En-Nesyri (MAR)
- 90' + 1' - Iago Aspas (ESP)
Cards
- 21' - Karim El Ahmadi (MAR)
- 29' - Nordin Amrabat (MAR)
- 31' - Da Costa Manuel (MAR)
- 31' - Mbark Boussoufa (MAR)
- 90' - Achraf Hakimi (MAR)
Full match recap, live blog and highlights
- Spain vs. Morocco live blog (CBS Sports)
2018 World Cup Standings
Here are the current standings. Teams are awarded three points for a win and one for a tie. Here are the standings thus far. Teams are awarded three points for a win and one for a tie. Teams listed in italics have been eliminated.
Groups A and B are finalized. Uruguay will face Portugal and Spain will face Russia in the Round of 16.
Group A Standings
- Uruguay (3-0-0) 9 points
- Russia (2-0-1) 6 points
- Saudi Arabia (1-0-2), 3 points
- Egypt (0-0-2) 0 points
Group B Standings
- Spain (1-2-0) 5 points (+1 goal differential)
- Portugal (1-2-0 ) 5 points (+1 goal differential)
- Iran (1-1-0), 4 points
- Morocco (0-1-2) 1 point
Group C Standings
- France (2-0-0) 6 points
- Denmark (1-1-0) 4 points
- Australia (0-1-1), 1 point
- Peru (0-0-2) 0 points
Group D Standings
- Croatia (2-0-0) 6 points
- Nigeria (1-0-1) 3 points
- Iceland (0-1-0) 1 point
- Argentina (0-1-1) 1 point
Group E Standings
- Brazil (1-1-0) 4 points
- Switzerland (1-1-0) 4 points
- Serbia (1-0-1) 3 points
- Costa Rica (0-2-0) 0 points
Group F Standings
- Mexico (2-0-0) 6 points
- Germany (1-0-1) 3 points
- Sweden (1-0-1) 3 points
- South Korea (0-0-2) 0 points
Group G Standings
- England (2-0-0) 6 points
- Belgium (2-0-0) 6 points
- Tunisia (0-0-2) 0 points
- Panama (0-0-2) 0 points
Group H Standings
- Japan (1-1-0) 4 points
- Senegal (1-1-0) 4 points
- Colombia (1-0-1) 3 points
- Poland (0-0-2) 0 points
Download a printable World Cup bracket
CBS Sports has created a downloadable World Cup bracket for you to follow along every World Cup match. The bracket contains all teams within all eight groups and how they place into the round of 16 in the knockout stage.
Event | 2018 FIFA World Cup | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
| |||||
Date | 15 July 2018 | ||||
Venue | Luzhniki Stadium, Moscow | ||||
Man of the Match | Antoine Griezmann (France)[1] | ||||
Referee | Néstor Pitana (Argentina)[2] | ||||
Attendance | 78,011[3] | ||||
Weather | Partly cloudy 27 °C (81 °F) 51% humidity[4] | ||||
← 2014 |
The 2018 FIFA World Cup Final was a football match that took place on 15 July 2018 to determine the winners of the 2018 FIFA World Cup. It was the final of the 21st FIFA World Cup, a quadrennial tournament contested by the men's national teams of the member associations of FIFA. The match was played by France and Croatia, and held at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow, Russia.
Before 2018, France's only World Cup victory was in 1998 – though they had also reached the final in 2006 – while Croatia were playing in their first World Cup final.
France won the match 4–2, having taken a 2–1 lead during the first half on an own goal and penalty awarded by the video assistant referee (VAR), both firsts in a World Cup final. France also became the second team in the 32-team World Cup to win all their knockout matches without any extra time or penalty shoot-out after Brazil in 2002. The final was watched by a global audience of 1.12 billion people on television and streaming platforms.
- 3Route to the final
- 4Pre-match
- 5Match
- 7Broadcasting and viewership
Venue[edit]
The final was played at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow, located in the Khamovniki District of the Central Administrative Okrug. An expanded version of the stadium was named as the provisional final venue in Russia's World Cup bid, which was selected by FIFA on 2 December 2010.[5] Luzhniki Stadium was confirmed as the final venue on 14 December 2012, following a meeting of the now-erswthile FIFA Executive Committee held in Tokyo, Japan.[6] The stadium also hosted six other matches, including the opening match on 14 June, three group stage matches, a round of 16 match, and the second semi-final match.[7][8]
The Luzhniki Stadium, previously known as the Grand Arena of the Central Lenin Stadium until 1992, originally opened in 1956 as part of the Luzhniki Olympic Complex to host the USSR Summer Spartakiade.[9][10] The stadium has served as the national stadium of the country, hosting many matches for the Russia national team and its predecessor, the Soviet Union national team.[7][11] In the past, the stadium has been used as the home ground at various times for CSKA Moscow, Torpedo Moscow, and Spartak Moscow. However, there are currently no clubs based at the stadium.[11][12]
The stadium has hosted numerous international sporting events. The stadium was the main venue for the 1980 Summer Olympics, hosting the opening and closing ceremonies, athletics, football (four matches, including the gold medal match), and the Individual Jumping Grand Prix.[10][13] The stadium hosted the 1999 UEFA Cup Final, as well as the 2008 UEFA Champions League Final.[14] Other events staged include the Spartakiad, the final game of the 1957 Ice Hockey World Championships, the 1973 Summer Universiade, the Friendship Games in 1984, the 1986 Goodwill Games, and the 1998 World Youth Games.[15][16] In 2013, the Rugby World Cup Sevens and World Athletics Championships were held at the ground in front of sparse crowds.[17] The stadium has also served as a venue for many concerts, including Western artists after the fall of the Soviet Union,[13] as well as political rallies.[18]
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Rated as a category 4 stadium by UEFA, the Luzhniki Stadium is the largest in Russia and at the 2018 World Cup; it usually has a maximum capacity of 81,006, but was reduced to 78,011 for the World Cup.[11][19] This also makes the stadium the largest in Eastern Europe,[20] and among the largest in Europe.[21][22] To prepare for the World Cup, the stadium was closed for extensive renovations in August 2013.[23] The spectator stands were moved closer to the pitch, which was converted from artificial turf to natural grass, after the removal of the athletic track. The historic facade of the stadium was preserved due to its architectural value, while the roof was upgraded using a new polycarbonate skin with exterior lighting.[24][25] The Luzhniki did not host any matches at the 2017 FIFA Confederations Cup due to the ongoing project.[26] The renovation project cost €341 million,[27] and the stadium officially reopened with an international friendly between Russia and Argentina on 11 November 2017.[28]
Background[edit]
After Uruguay and Brazil were eliminated in the quarter-finals, a European side was ensured to win the World Cup for a fourth consecutive tournament.[29] The match was also the ninth all-European World Cup final, which most recently occurred in 2006 and 2010.[30][31]
The match was the third World Cup final for France, first appearing in the 1998 final as hosts, winning 3–0 against reigning champions Brazil. France also contested the 2006 final, where they lost to Italy in a penalty shoot-out following a 1–1 draw.[32][33] Only Germany (eight) and Italy (six) have reached more finals among European nations.[34]Didier Deschamps became the fourth person to reach a World Cup final as both a player and as a manager, after Franz Beckenbauer, Rudi Völler, and Mário Zagallo.[35]
The match was the first World Cup final for Croatia in their fifth World Cup appearance. They are the 10th European country and 13th overall to reach a World Cup final, and the first new finalist since Spain in 2010.[36][37] With a population of 4.17 million, Croatia is the second least-populated country to play in a World Cup final, behind Uruguay (victors in 1930 and 1950).[38] Croatia's previous best performance was as World Cup debutants in 1998, when they finished in third place,[39] losing 2–1 to hosts France in the semi-finals before beating the Netherlands 2–1 in the third place play-off.[40][41]
The final was the sixth meeting between France and Croatia, with France undefeated in the previous fixtures with three wins and two draws.[42] The two sides first met in the 1998 World Cup semi-final, with hosts France winning 2–1.[43] Their only other competitive meeting was during the group stage of Euro 2004, which finished as a 2–2 draw. Their next, and most recent, meeting was in a March 2011 friendly match, which finished as a 0–0 draw.[44]
Route to the final[edit]
France | Round | Croatia | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Opponents | Result | Group stage | Opponents | Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Australia | 2–1 | Match 1 | Nigeria | 2–0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Peru | 1–0 | Match 2 | Argentina | 3–0 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Denmark | 0–0 | Match 3 | Iceland | 2–1 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Group C winners
| Final standings | Group D winners
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Opponents | Result | Knockout stage | Opponents | Result | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Argentina | 4–3 | Round of 16 | Denmark | 1–1 (a.e.t.) (3–2 p) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Uruguay | 2–0 | Quarter-finals | Russia | 2–2 (a.e.t.) (4–3 p) | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Belgium | 1–0 | Semi-finals | England | 2–1 (a.e.t.) |
France[edit]
France entered the 2018 World Cup as one of the favourites to win the tournament, particularly for their strong squad featuring several youth talents.[45] The team finished as runners-up to Portugal at Euro 2016, which the country hosted.[45] The team qualified for the World Cup finals after finishing first in their qualification group, ahead of Sweden and the Netherlands.[45]
At the World Cup, France were drawn into Group C alongside Australia, Denmark, and Peru. The team defeated Australia 2–1 in its opening match in Kazan, with a penalty called by the video assistant referee and scored by Antoine Griezmann followed by an own goal deflected by Australian defender Aziz Behich.[46] In its second match, France won 1–0 over Peru on a goal scored by 19-year-old Kylian Mbappé, who became France's youngest goalscorer at a major tournament.[47][48] The victory over Peru qualified France for the knockout stage, allowing manager Didier Deschamps to rest several starting players for the final group stage match against Denmark. The match at the Luzhniki Stadium in Moscow finished in a scoreless draw marked by misplaced passes and goalkeeping mistakes.[49] The team's group stage performance was characterised as lacking cohesion and failing to use its star players effectively.[50]
Finishing as winners of Group C, France were matched in the round of 16 with Group D runners-up Argentina. France won 4–3 on two goals scored by Mbappé, who also won a penalty in the opening minutes.[51] Defender Benjamin Pavard also scored in the match, with his strike later voted as goal of the tournament.[52] Mbappé's performance drew comparisons to Brazilian stars Ronaldo and Pelé, who in 1958 was the most recent teenager to score twice in a World Cup match.[53][54] In the quarter-finals, France defeated Uruguay 2–0 on a goal and assist by Griezmann.[55] The team advanced to a semi-final match against Belgium in St. Petersburg, which ended in a 1–0 win for the French with a corner kick headed into the goal by defender Samuel Umtiti.[56] The French team, particularly Mbappé, were criticised for timewasting and other unsportsmanlike conduct in the semi-finals after taking the lead in the second half.[57]
Croatia[edit]
Croatia entered the 2018 World Cup as dark horses, with their golden generation led by forward Mario Mandžukić and midfielders Marcelo Brozović, Mateo Kovačić, Luka Modrić, Ivan Perišić, and Ivan Rakitić.[58][59] The team had been eliminated in the group stage at the 2014 tournament,[60] but reached the round of 16 at Euro 2016.[61] In their qualification group, Croatia scored 15 goals and finished second to Iceland after appointing manager Zlatko Dalić amid a series of poor away results.[62][63] However, Croatia managed to advance past Greece in the qualifying play-offs, winning the first leg 4–1 and drawing 0–0 in the second.[64]
Croatia were drawn into Group D with Argentina, Iceland, and Nigeria, considered a difficult draw due to Argentina's talent and Nigeria's historic performances.[62][65] In their opening match, the team earned a 2–0 victory over Nigeria, with an own goal by Oghenekaro Etebo caused by Mandžukić and a penalty scored by Modrić.[66] Striker Nikola Kalinić refused to enter the match as a substitute, citing back pain as his reason for not playing, and was expelled from the team by Dalić, leaving Croatia with only 22 players for the remainder of the tournament.[67] Croatia went on to upset Argentina with a 3–0 win, thanks to an effective game plan that used the 'height and strength of their players to dominate the game in aerial duels', playing a 'pressing game, counter-attacking, and more direct play in possession' to counter Lionel Messi, scoring all their goals in the second half.[68] Croatia finished atop the group with a 2–1 win over Iceland, resting several starting players in the final group match.[69][70][71]
In the round of 16, Croatia played Denmark and earned a 1–1 draw after the two teams exchanged goals in the opening five minutes and a missed penalty from Modrić in extra time. Croatia won the subsequent penalty shootout 3–2, with three saves by goalkeeper Danijel Subašić and two saves by Danish goalkeeper Kasper Schmeichel.[72][73] The team advanced to a quarter-final fixture with hosts Russia, who had defeated Spain in the round of 16, in Sochi. The Russians scored their first in the 31st minute, but Andrej Kramarić equalised for Croatia eight minutes later and kept the score at 1–1 through the end of regular time. Croatia took a 2–1 lead in extra time with a header by Domagoj Vida, but Russian defender Mário Fernandes equalised in stoppage time to trigger a penalty shootout. The shootout was won 4–3 by Croatia after two misses by Russia and a shot by Modrić that rebounded off the post and into the goal.[74][75] Croatia became the second team in World Cup to win two shootouts in a tournament, after Argentina in 1990.[76] After the match, a video of Vida shouting 'Glory to Ukraine' prompted controversy among Russians and a warning from FIFA's disciplinary committee, which enforces a ban on political slogans.[77] Croatia's semi-final match against England at the Luzhniki began as they conceded a free kick goal by English defender Kieran Trippier in the fifth minute. Croatia resisted several attempts by England to score a second goal in the first half. Croatia managed an equalising goal of their own through a shot by Perišić in the 68th minute. The match was won 2–1 by Croatia after a 109th-minute goal by Mandžukić. This made Croatia the first team to earn three come-from-behind victories in the FIFA World Cup, all three matches also going into extra time.[78][79]
Pre-match[edit]
Match ball[edit]
The official match ball for the final was the Telstar Mechta (Russian: Мечта; transl. dream or ambition), a red-coloured variant of the Adidas Telstar 18 introduced for the knockout stage.[80][81] The Telstar family, a homage to the original 1970 Telstar, was designed similarly to 2014's Brazuca, but with longer seams and additional panels.[82]
Officials[edit]
Argentine referee Néstor Pitana was selected to lead the officiating team for the final, which was announced on 12 July 2018 by the FIFA Referees Committee. The final is Pitana's fifth match as referee during the tournament, becoming only the second referee to officiate the opening match and the final.[83] Pitana officiated an additional group stage match, along with two knockout stage matches in the round of 16 and quarter-finals. Pitana has been a FIFA referee since 2010, and officiated four matches at the 2014 FIFA World Cup. His compatriots Hernán Maidana and Juan Pablo Belatti were chosen as assistant referees. Björn Kuipers of the Netherlands was chosen as the fourth official, with his fellow countryman Erwin Zeinstra as the reserve assistant.[2] Italian Massimiliano Irrati was named the video assistant referee, presiding over the first use of the technology at a World Cup final. Argentine Mauro Vigliano was chosen as the assistant video assistant referee, while Carlos Astroza of Chile was appointed as the second assistant and Danny Makkelie of the Netherlands as the third assistant.[84]
Closing ceremony[edit]
The tournament's closing ceremony was held prior to the start of the match, featuring a performance of 'Live It Up', the official song of the tournament, by Will Smith, Nicky Jam, and Era Istrefi. Jam also performed 'X (Equis)', wearing a shirt honouring J Balvin.[85] Opera singer Aida Garifullina sang the Russian folk song 'Kalinka', accompanied by a children's choir and percussion section that featured a cameo by Brazilian star Ronaldinho.[86]
Match[edit]
Summary[edit]
Croatia kicked off the final at 18:00 local time (15:00 UTC), with the ground temperature reported at 27 °C (81 °F). The match was played through a minor thunderstorm, which produced several visible lightning strikes.[87] An audience of 78,011 spectators at the Luzhniki Stadium watched the match, including ten heads of state, among them Russian presidentVladimir Putin, French presidentEmmanuel Macron, and Croatian presidentKolinda Grabar-Kitarović.[88] The starting line-ups for both teams were identical to those fielded in the semi-finals.[89]
Croatia had the majority of possession and chances early in the first half, with the ball staying mostly in France's half.[90][91] An attack by French midfielder Antoine Griezmann was stopped by a challenge from Marcelo Brozović, which was called as a foul despite claims that Griezmann dived.[92][93][94] Griezmann took the ensuing 30-yard (27 m) free kick, which was diverted by the head of Mario Mandžukić into the left corner of his own net to give France the lead in the 18th minute.[95] It was the first own goal to be scored in a World Cup final and the 12th of the tournament, the most of any World Cup.[96]
Ten minutes later, Croatia equalised with a left-footed strike by Ivan Perišić to the right corner of the net, assisted by Domagoj Vida after a free kick by Luka Modrić on the right. In the 34th minute, a penalty was awarded against Croatia after Perišić's handball in the box from a corner on the right was reviewed by the video assistant referee.[95] Griezmann scored the penalty in the 38th minute with a low finish to the left, giving France a 2–1 lead at half-time; the first half's three goals were the most of any World Cup final since 1974.[97] France led at half-time despite having only one shot on goal and with only 34% of possession.[96]
A Croatian counter-attack was stopped early in the second half after several pitch invaders were chased onto the field by security officers; Russian feminist rock band and protest group Pussy Riot claimed responsibility for the interruption.[98] In the 59th minute, France extended their lead to 3–1 with a left-foot strike to the left of the net from the edge of the penalty area by Paul Pogba after his initial shot had been blocked. Six minutes later, Kylian Mbappé scored France's fourth goal, with a low right-foot shot from outside the box to the left of the net; Mbappé became the first teenager to score in a World Cup final since Pelé in 1958.[91] Croatia scored their second goal in the 69th minute from a back-pass that goalkeeper Hugo Lloris failed to dribble away from Mandžukić, who poked the loose ball into the unguarded net with his right leg. Despite a late push by Croatia, the match finished as a 4–2 victory for France and the highest-scoring World Cup final since 1966.[90][97]
Details[edit]
France | 4–2 | Croatia |
---|---|---|
| Report |
|
|
Man of the Match: Assistant referees:[99] | Match rules[100]
|
Statistics[edit]
|
|
|
Post-match[edit]
France became the sixth country to win the World Cup more than once with their win.[102] Didier Deschamps became the third person to have won the World Cup as both a player and manager, after Mário Zagallo and Franz Beckenbauer.[35] The final was the highest scoring since 1966, and the highest score in regular time since 1958.[88][97] The winner's medals were presented on the pitch to the French team by presidents Putin, Macron, and Grabar-Kitarović amid a heavy rainstorm.[103]FIFA presidentGianni Infantino handed the trophy to French captain Hugo Lloris.[104]
Croatian captain Luka Modrić won the Golden Ball as best player of the tournament.[105] France's Antoine Griezmann, the final's man of the match,[106] also won the Bronze Ball and the Silver Boot award with four goals and two assists. Kylian Mbappé won the Best Young Player award for the tournament.[107]
Large crowds, including 90,000 people at the Eiffel Tower fanzone and an estimated million on the Champs-Élysées, celebrated the victory in Paris.[108][109] The celebrations were marred by instances of rioting that were broken up by police, as well as the deaths of at least two people during celebrations elsewhere in the country, one man died after diving into a shallow canal and another died after crashing his car into a tree,[110][111]RATP, the operator of the Paris Métro system, temporarily renamed several stations in honour of the team and its World Cup victory.[112] On 16 July, more than 550,000 fans welcomed the Croatian team home in the capital city of Zagreb, in the single largest public gathering in Croatia's history, where a six-hour-long bus tour brought them from Zagreb Airport to Ban Jelačić Square.[113]
Broadcasting and viewership[edit]
FIFA estimated that the global audience for the final peaked at 1.12 billion people, including 884 million watching television broadcasts and 232 million using other platforms, including online streaming, and at public venues.[114] According to a broadcast audit report, 86.7 percent of televisions in France and 88.6 in Croatia were watching the broadcast.[115]
Europe[edit]
In France, the final was televised on TF1 and BeIN Sports and drew an average of 26.1 million viewers, making it the most watched event ever in French television history.[116] In the United Kingdom, the final had an average viewership of 10.5 million and a peak viewership of 13.8 million, split between free-to-air broadcasters BBC One and ITV, almost half that of the viewership of England–Croatia semi-final.[117][118][119] In Germany, the match drew a viewership of 21.3 million, which was around 76% of the market share, on state-owned ZDF.[118][119][120] In Spain, the match had a 57.3% share, with 8.2 million viewers on Mediaset España Comunicación's Telecinco.[118] In Croatia, the match drew around 1.538 million viewers – more than 38% of the population – on national broadcaster HTV2 for an 89.3% market share.[119][120][121] In Italy, it drew 11.7 million viewers on Canale 5.[118][120] In the Netherlands, the match had a viewership of 3.1 million on NPO1.[120] In the host nation of Russia, the final was the third-most watched match of the 2018 World Cup and accounted for around 50% of the nation's population.[122]
In total, the final drew more than 160 million viewers in 20 European territories, including Russia, the United Kingdom and Germany.[123][124] Download highly compressed pc games below 10 mb.
Rest of the world[edit]
In the United States of America, the match was broadcast on NBCUniversal-owned Telemundo and 21st Century Fox-owned Fox and Fox Sports, the match averaged 16.6 million viewers combined, with Telemundo reaching a total of 57% of the country's Latino population.[125][126][127][128] In India, 70 million viewers streamed the match online, through Sony Picture Networks India's (SPN) Sony Liv application, which was a record for a football match;[129][130][131] an additional 22.4 million viewers watched the match on Sony Ten 2, Sony Ten 3 and Sony ESPN.[129] In China, the match drew a combined of 56 million viewers on state-broadcasters CCTV-1 and CCTV-5, the most-watched sporting event in China since 2008 Beijing Olympics;[125][123][124] an additional 24 million viewers streamed the match through Youku, a video-service and an Alibaba Group subsidiary.[132][133] In Australia, the final was watched by an average of 2.2 million viewers – with a peak of 3.4 million viewers – on national public broadcaster SBS.[134][135] Whereas, in Canada, the final was watched by an average of 3.9 million viewers, with a peak of 5.4 million viewers on CTV, TSN and RDS.[136]
Advertising[edit]
In the United States, Fox received between US$399,000 and $750,000 for a 30-second advertisement spot during the World Cup final;[137][138][139] whereas in France, TF1 got up to $300,000 for a 30-second ad-spot.[125]
See also[edit]
References[edit]
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- ^Jennings, Patrick (21 June 2018). 'Argentina 0–3 Croatia'. BBC Sport. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Mather, Victor (26 June 2018). 'Croatia Crushes Iceland's World Cup Dream'. The New York Times. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^'Croatia take Group D with 2–1 win against Iceland'. EFE. 27 June 2018. Retrieved 12 July 2018.
- ^Wilson, Jeremy; Eccleshare, Charlie (2 July 2018). 'Croatia through to World Cup quarter-finals after dramatic penalty shoot-out victory over Denmark'. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^'Subasic the hero as Croatia claim shootout win'. FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 2 July 2018. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Rogers, Martin (7 July 2018). 'Russia's underdog World Cup run comes to an end with PK loss to Croatia'. USA Today. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Hytner, David (7 July 2018). 'Croatia book World Cup semi-final with England after penalty shootout win'. The Guardian. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Debayan (7 July 2018). 'By the numbers: Back-to-back shootout wins for Croatia, record penalty saves for Subasic'. ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Petrosyan, Artur (8 July 2018). 'Croatia defender Domagoj Vida warned by FIFA over pro-Ukraine comments'. ESPN.com. ESPN Internet Ventures. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Das, Andrew; Mather, Victor (11 July 2018). 'Croatia Turns England's World Cup Destiny Into Despair'. The New York Times. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Rogers, Martin (11 July 2018). 'Croatia tops England in extra time to reach World Cup final'. USA Today. Retrieved 11 July 2018.
- ^Wright, Chris (26 June 2018). 'World Cup 2018 match ball released – yep, that's right, another one'. ESPN. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
- ^'adidas Football Reveals Official Match Ball for the Knockout Stage of the 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia'. FIFA.com (Press release). Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 26 June 2018. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
- ^Sabin, Dyani (18 June 2018). 'How the new World Cup ball was designed to not influence the games'. Popular Science. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
- ^'Pitana: It's an indescribable feeling'. FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 13 July 2018. Retrieved 14 July 2018.
- ^Gantman, Marcelo (12 July 2018). 'Los atributos que le vio la FIFA a Néstor Pitana para designarlo para la final del Mundial Rusia 2018: 'la roca' que marcó el estilo arbitral' [The attributes that saw FIFA designate Néstor Pitana for the 2018 World Cup Final: 'the rock' that marked the refereeing style]. La Nación (in Spanish). Retrieved 12 July 2018.
- ^'Will Smith, Nicky Jam y Era Istrefi calientan la final' [Will Smith, Nicky Jam and Era Istrefi warm up the final]. La Jornada (in Spanish). Notimex. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^'Hollywood star Will Smith brings down curtain on Russia World Cup'. Reuters. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^Das, Andrew; Mather, Victor (15 July 2018). 'France vs. Croatia: World Cup Final Live Updates'. The New York Times. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ abGoff, Steven; Fortier, Sam; Wilson, Scott (15 July 2018). 'France blazes past Croatia to win World Cup title for the second time'. The Washington Post. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^Austin, Jack (15 July 2018). 'World Cup final: France and Croatia name unchanged line-ups as Kylian Mbappe starts'. The Independent. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ abGlendenning, Barry (15 July 2018). 'World Cup 2018 final: France v Croatia – live!'. The Guardian. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ abOgden, Mark (15 July 2018). 'Mbappe powers France to World Cup glory, Croatia reeling after VAR controversy'. ESPN. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^Potts, Michael. 'Antoine Griezmann: Did France star dive vs Croatia in World Cup final?'. The Daily Express. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^Doré, Louis. 'Griezmann dive and Perisic penalty: Two big decisions go against Croatia in World Cup final'. i. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
- ^'Griezmann dive fools Pitana and leads to opening goal for France'. Diario AS. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
- ^ abTaylor, Daniel (15 July 2018). 'France seal second World Cup triumph with 4–2 win over brave Croatia'. The Guardian. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ abBull, JJ (15 July 2018). 'World Cup final 2018, France vs Croatia: live score and latest updates'. The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^ abc'France lift second World Cup after winning classic final 4–2'. Reuters. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^'Pussy Riot claim responsibility for World Cup Final pitch invasion'. Evening Standard. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
- ^ abc'Tactical Line-up – Final – France v Croatia'(PDF). FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^'Regulations – 2018 FIFA World Cup Russia'(PDF). FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. Retrieved 16 November 2017.
- ^'Match report: Half-time – Final – France v Croatia'(PDF). FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
- ^Prince-Wright, Joe (15 July 2018). 'France win World Cup after classic final'. NBC Sports. Retrieved 15 July 2018.
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- ^'Golden consolation for magical Modric'. FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 15 July 2018. Retrieved 16 July 2018.
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- ^'More than half the world watched record-breaking 2018 World Cup'. FIFA.com. Fédération Internationale de Football Association. 21 December 2018. Retrieved 21 December 2018.
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- ^'26,1 millions de télespectateurs au total devant la finale de la Coupe du Monde'. L’Équipe. 25 July 2018. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
- ^White, Peter; Tartaglione, Nancy (16 July 2018). 'World Cup Final Scores 22.3M Peak In France As TF1 Secures Best Ratings Since 2016'. Deadline Hollywood. Penske Media Corporation. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- ^ abcdKeslassy, Elsa (18 July 2018). 'Global Broadcasters Score Big With Live World Cup Final Ratings'. Variety. Leo Barraclough, Stewart Clarke, John Hopewell, Vivarelli and Joseph Otterson. London, Madrid, Rome, Los Angeles: Michelle Sobrino-Stearns. ISSN0042-2738. OCLC810134503. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
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- ^ abDoherty, Christian (17 July 2018). 'Eurodata: World Cup Final reached 163m viewers in Europe'. Digital TV Europe. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
- ^ abcKeslassy, Elsa (18 July 2018). 'Global Broadcasters Score Big With Live World Cup Final Ratings'. Variety. Leo Barraclough, Stewart Clarke, John Hopewell, Vivarelli and Joseph Otterson. London, Madrid, Rome, Los Angeles: Michelle Sobrino-Stearns. ISSN0042-2738. OCLC810134503. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- ^Nicolaou, Anna (17 July 2018). 'World Cup final ratings flop for Fox'. Financial Times. New York City. ISSN0307-1766. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
- ^O'Connell, Michael (16 July 2018). 'TV Ratings: World Cup Final Drops 32 Percent From 2014, Posts Fox Best'. The Hollywood Reporter. Lynne Segall. ISSN0018-3660. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
- ^Harris, Christopher (17 July 2018). 'World Cup Final delivers 17 million viewers across FOX and Telemundo combined'. World Soccer Talk. Retrieved 20 July 2018.
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- ^'World Cup TV Ratings: SBS scores with 9.1 million viewers across 57 matches'. Mediaweek. Mediaweek. 19 July 2018. Retrieved 19 July 2018.
- ^'25.8 Million Canadians Make the FIFA WORLD CUP™ on CTV, TSN, and RDS a Resounding Success' (Press release). Toronto: TSN. 17 July 2018. Retrieved 22 July 2018.
Preliminary overnight data from Numeris confirms that an average audience of 3.9 million viewers watched the FIFA WORLD CUP™ Final on Sunday. Audiences peaked at 5.4 million viewers at 12:53 p.m. ET as France secured their second-ever FIFA WORLD CUP™ victory.
- ^Lynch, Jason (10 July 2018). 'Fox Sports Says Its World Cup Has Been an Ad Revenue Success, Even Without the U.S. Team'. Adweek. ISSN0199-2864. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
- ^Gray, Sarah (11 July 2018). 'Fox Sports Says the World Cup Brought in Plenty of Ad Dollars—Despite a Rocky Ratings Start'. Fortune. ISSN0015-8259. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
- ^Lafayette, Jon (12 July 2018). 'Fox Nears Sellout for World Cup Final Match'. Broadcasting & Cable. ISSN1068-6827. Retrieved 25 July 2018.
External links[edit]
Wikimedia Commons has media related to 2018 FIFA World Cup Final. |
FIFA World Cup 2018 Schedule
The FIFA World Cup 2018 is scheduled to be held in Russia from 14 June to 15 July this year. The previous edition of FIFA world cup held in 2014 was won by Germany. In the 21st edition of the FIFA World Cup, there are 32 teams divided into eight groups of four each. The Football World Cup will be held in Europe for the first time since 2006. There will be a total of 64 matches played across 12 venues located in 11 cities. The timings of the matches are quite fan friendly in India as most of the matches will take place in the evening and extend to night. Here's a comprehensive look at the FIFA World Cup 2018 schedule in Indian Standard Time(IST).
Semi Final: FIFA World Cup 2018 Schedule
Match | Date | Time (IST) | Venue | Matches |
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Third Place Playoff: 2018 FIFA World Cup Fixtures
Match | Date | Time (IST) | Venue | Matches |
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Final: FIFA World Cup 2018 Schedule
Match | Date | Time (IST) | Venue | Matches |
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The 2018 World Cup — the 21st edition of the international soccer tournament — will be held in Russia. This is the first time that the tournament will be held in Russia.
A total of 32 teams will be competing, with the group stage set for June 14-June 28, Round of 16 from June 30-July 3, quarterfinals on July 6-7, semifinals on July 10-11 and the final on July 15.
Germany are the defending champions (every World Cup winner).
WHEN: June 14-July 15
TV INFO: English-language broadcast on FOX or FS1 (stream on Fox Sports Go). Spanish-language broadcast on Telemundo or NBC Universo.
SCHEDULE (All times Eastern):
GROUP PLAY
Thursday, June 14
Russia 5, Saudi Arabia 0
Friday, June 15
Uruguay 1, Egypt 0
Iran 1, Morocco 0
Portugal 3, Spain 3
Saturday, June 16
France 2, Australia 1
Argentina 1, Iceland 1
Denmark 1, Peru 0
Croatia 2, Nigeria 0
Sunday, June 17
Serbia 1, Costa Rica 0
Mexico 1, Germany 0
Brazil 1, Switzerland 1
Monday, June 18
Sweden 1, South Korea 0
Belgium 3, Panama 0
England 2, Tunisia 1
Tuesday, June 19
Japan 2, Colombia 1
Senegal 2, Poland 1
Russia 3, Egypt 1
Wednesday, June 20
Portugal 1, Morocco 0
Uruguay 1, Saudi Arabia 0
Spain 1, Iran 0
Thursday, June 21
France 1, Peru 0
Australia 1, Denmark 1
Croatia 3, Argentina 0
Friday, June 22
Brazil 2, Costa Rica 0
Nigeria 2, Iceland 0
Switzerland 2, Serbia 1
Saturday, June 23
Belgium 5, Tunisia 2
Germany 2, Sweden 1
Mexico 2, South Korea 1
Sunday, June 24
England 6, Panama 1
Japan 2, Senegal 2
Colombia 3, Poland 0
Monday, June 25
Saudi Arabia 2, Egypt 1
Uruguay 3, Russia 0
Portugal 1, Iran 1
Spain 2, Morocco 2
Tuesday, June 26
France 0, Denmark 0
Peru 2, Australia 0
Croatia 2, Iceland 1
Argentina 2, Nigeria 1
Wednesday, June 27
Sweden 3, Mexico 0
South Korea 2, Germany 0
Brazil 2, Serbia 0
Switzerland 2, Costa Rica 2
Thursday, June 28
Poland 1, Japan 0
Colombia 1, Senegal 0
Belgium 1, England 0
Tunisia 2, Panama 1
ROUND OF 16
Saturday, June 30
France 4, Argentina 3
Uruguay 2, Portugal 1
Sunday, July 1
Russia 1, Spain 1 (Russia wins 4-3 in PKs)
Croatia 1, Denmark 1 (Croatia wins 3-2 in PKs)
Monday, July 2
Brazil 2, Mexico 0
Belgium 3, Japan 2
Tuesday, July 3
Sweden 1, Switzerland 0
England 1, Colombia 1 (England wins 4-3 in PKs)
QUARTERFINALS
Friday, July 6
France 2, Uruguay 0
Belgium 2, Brazil 1
Saturday, July 7
England 2, Sweden 0
Croatia 2, Russia 2 (Croatia wins 4-3 in PKs)
SEMIFINALS
Tuesday, July 10
France 1, Belgium 0
Wednesday, July 11
England vs. Croatia (in Moscow), 2 p.m. on FOX
THIRD-PLACE MATCH
Saturday, July 14
Belgium 2, England 0
FINAL
Sunday, July 15
France vs. Croatia (in Moscow), 11 a.m. on FOX
MUST-READ STORIES:
World Cup power rankings: Rating all 32 teams, from hopeless to hopefuls
World Cup: Top 50 players to watch in Russia
World Cup: Five early upsets that could shape tournament
World Cup: 11 compelling reasons to watch
World Cup: Notable teams that failed to qualify
World Cup snubs: A team of the best players not going to Russia
FIFA World Cup: 11 greatest players to never win
Every FIFA World Cup champion: From 1930 Uruguay to 2014 Germany
FIFA World Cup: Top 10 best moments in tournament history
FIFA World Cup: Top 10 craziest moments ever
2018 World Cup: Why the USMNT won't be in Russia
STADIUMS:
Kaliningrad - Kaliningrad Stadium (35,000 capacity)
Kazan - Kazan Arena (45,000 capacity)
Moscow - Luzhniki Stadium (80,000 capacity)
Moscow - Spartak Stadium (45,000 capacity)
Nizhny Novgorod - Nizhny Novgorod Stadium (45,000 capacity)
Rostov-on-Don - Rostov Arena (45,000 capacity)
Samara - Samara Arena (45,000 capacity)
Saransk - Mordovia Arena (44,000 capacity)
Sochi - Fisht Olympic Stadium (45,000 capacity)
Saint Petersburg - Krestovsky Stadium (67,000 capacity)
Volgograd - Volgograd Arena (45,000 capacity)
Yekaterinburg - Central Stadium (35,000 capacity)
X plane 10 aircraft. More: Guide to the 12 World Cup stadiums across Russia
— Jonas Giæver (@CheGiaevara) July 11, 2018
English captain Harry Kane knows his side can perform better at the 2022 World Cup (via BreakingnewsUK.com):
It’s been great to get to this stage and we know we’ve done everyone proud, but we wanted to go on and we wanted to win it. We felt we were good enough and we felt we could have done that, but we fell a bit short. It hurts. The next step is now to go one further, it’s a great foundation we’ve built with the gaffer over the last couple of years and we just need to carry that on but we want more. We’re sad for the fans here and at home. We have to dust ourselves done and be proud of what we achieved and go again in a couple of years.
Ian Darke joked about the time between these England-Belgium matchups:
Coming up .the most pointless England v Belgium game since ..er, the last one two weeks ago.
— Ian Darke (@IanDarke) July 12, 2018
Kaveh Solhekol believes both teams should be gunning to claim third in this prestigious tournament:
Don’t understand everyone turning their noses up at England’s play off against Belgium. Not often you get chance to finish third in a World Cup
— Kaveh Solhekol (@SkyKaveh) July 12, 2018
ESPN UK published a quote from England boss Gareth Southgate in wake of his squad’s loss in the semifinals:
Class from Gareth Southgate pic.twitter.com/ylJy5MeJtr
— ESPN UK (@ESPNUK) July 12, 2018
Southgate also claimed that he would have his players ready to perform with pride in the third-place game, even though it’s not a match they prefer to be involved with (via Sky News):
The honest thing is it's not a game any team wants to play in. We have two days to prepare. We will want to give a performance of huge pride. There's no question about that. It's always there every time we wear the shirt of our national team, we want to play with pride, we want to play well and win. Of course it is going to be a really difficult task over the next 24 hours to assess everybody and to get everybody mentally back to where we want them for a game like that.
France vs. Croatia World Cup Final
Croatia manager Zlatko Dalic spoke about how his side would not give up against England (via Reuters):
Some players played with minor injuries with which they would not have played some other games. Two players played with half a leg, but it didn’t show. Nobody wanted to give in when I was preparing the first eleven, nobody wanted to say I was not ready in extra time, no one wanted to be subbed and this shows character and what makes me proud. Nobody gave up
FOX Soccer tweeted an interesting graphic to get fans hyped for the final:
France. Croatia.
THE FINAL IS SET pic.twitter.com/CZlaj7qvZe
— FOX Soccer (@FOXSoccer) July 11, 2018
Darren Lewis thinks that Croatia was a bit too confident after beating England:
Croatia ungraciously coating off England post-match, forgetting France are waiting for them in the Final. #goodluck
— Darren Lewis (@MirrorDarren) July 11, 2018
French star Paul Pogba stated that his squad is not going to make the same mistakes that it did by underestimating Portugal in the finals of Euro 2016 (via Reuters):
We are conscious of the situation, we do not want to make the same mistakes like two years ago. We want to work for it, to give everything we have to take this Cup home. I think at the Euro we thought it was already a done deal, the mentality was not the same as now. I cannot lie that when we beat Germany we thought that was the final. I know the taste of losing a final. I don’t want it to happen again. Against Portugal we thought we had won it before the start of the game. That will not happen again.
Rob Beckett isn’t exactly thrilled with this finals matchup:
I’ve got a confession. I spent a small fortune on travel, accommodation and a World Cup Final ticket. Now I’ve got to go and watch France v Croatia and I don’t know how to deal with it.
— Rob Beckett (@robbeckettcomic) July 11, 2018
UNILAD Football noted that this Croatia-France showdown keeps a certain streak alive:
After Croatia and France reached the final, the record of Inter Milan and Bayern Munich having a player in every World Cup final since 1982 is still preserved. Ivan Perisic and Marcelo Brozovic will represent Inter, while Corentin Tolisso plays for Bayern. pic.twitter.com/s0Fy3yHPKW
— UNILAD Football (@UNILADFooty) July 12, 2018
Croatia talisman Luka Modric revealed that his teammates were inspired by the disrespect they received from pundits (via USA Today):
We showed again we were not tired. We dominated the game physically, mentally, in all aspects. English journalists, pundits from television, they underestimated Croatia and that was a huge mistake. They should be more humble and respect more opponents. All these words from them we take, we were reading and we were saying, ‘OK, today we will see who will be tired’. It is the biggest success in Croatian history in sport and we have to be proud.
Tim and Sid pondered if the Blazers have enough left in the tank after all of their knockout stage matches went to extra time:
Will Croatia have enough left in the tank to take down France after all of the minutes they've racked up during this #WorldCup?@jamessharman stopped by #TimAndSid yesterday to chat about that with @evankaosmak and @donnovanbennett. pic.twitter.com/M8MKGmylbb
— Tim and Sid (@timandsid) July 12, 2018
2018 FIFA World Cup Final Picks
Belgium vs. England Third-Place Game
Prediction: Belgium 1 – England 0
France vs. Croatia World Cup Final
Prediction: France 1 – Croatia 1 (regulation), France 2 – Croatia 1 (AET)
2018 FIFA World Cup Results
Matchup | Group | Score |
Group Stage | ||
Thursday, June 14 | ||
Russia vs. Saudi Arabia | Group A | RUS 5 – KSA 0 |
Friday, June 15 | ||
Egypt vs. Uruguay | Group A | URU 1 – EGY 0 |
Morocco vs. Iran | Group B | IRN 1 – MAR 0 |
Portugal vs. Spain | Group B | POR 3 – ESP 3 |
Saturday, June 16 | ||
France vs. Australia | Group C | FRA 2 – AUS 1 |
Argentina vs. Iceland* | Group D | ARG 1 – ISL 1 |
Peru vs. Denmark | Group C | DEN 1 – PER 0 |
Croatia vs. Nigeria | Group D | CRO 2 – NGA 0 |
Sunday, June 17 | ||
Costa Rica vs. Serbia | Group E | SRB 1 – CRC 0 |
Germany vs. Mexico | Group F | MEX 1 – GER 0 |
Brazil vs. Switzerland | Group E | BRA 1 – SUI 1 |
Monday, June 18 | ||
Sweden vs. South Korea | Group F | SWE 1 – KOR 0 |
Belgium vs. Panama | Group G | BEL 3 – PAN 0 |
Tunisia vs. England | Group G | ENG 2 – TUN 1 |
Tuesday, June 19 | ||
Colombia vs. Japan | Group H | JPN 2 – COL 1 |
Poland vs. Senegal | Group H | SEN 2 – POL 1 |
Russia vs. Egypt | Group A | RUS 3 - EGY 1 |
Wednesday, June 20 | ||
Portugal vs. Morocco | Group B | POR 1 – MAR 0 |
Uruguay vs. Saudi Arabia | Group A | URU 1 – KSA 0 |
Iran vs. Spain | Group B | ESP 1 – IRN 0 |
Thursday, June 21 | ||
Denmark vs. Australia | Group C | DEN 1 – AUS 1 |
France vs. Peru | Group C | FRA 1 – PER 0 |
Argentina vs. Croatia | Group D | CRO 3 – ARG 0 |
Friday, June 22 | ||
Brazil vs. Costa Rica | Group E | BRA 2 – CRC 0 |
Nigeria vs. Iceland | Group D | NGA 2 – ISL 0 |
Serbia vs. Switzerland | Group E | SUI 2 – SRB 1 |
Saturday, June 23 | ||
Belgium vs. Tunisia | Group G | BEL 5 – TUN 2 |
South Korea vs. Mexico | Group F | MEX 2 – KOR 0 |
Germany vs. Sweden | Group F | GER 2 – SWE 1 |
Sunday, June 24 | ||
England vs. Panama | Group G | ENG 6 – PAN 1 |
Japan vs. Senegal | Group H | JPN 2 – SEN 2 |
Poland vs. Colombia | Group H | COL 3 – POL 0 |
Monday, June 25 | ||
Uruguay vs. Russia | Group A | URU 3 – RUS 0 |
Saudi Arabia vs. Egypt | Group A | KSA 2 – EGY 1 |
Spain vs. Morocco | Group B | ESP 2 – MAR 2 |
Iran vs. Portugal | Group B | IRN 1 – POR 1 |
Tuesday, June 26 | ||
Denmark vs. France | Group C | FRA 0 – DEN 0 |
Australia vs. Peru | Group C | PER 2 – AUS 0 |
Nigeria vs. Argentina | Group D | ARG 2 – NGA 1 |
Iceland vs. Croatia | Group D | CRO 2 – ISL 1 |
Wednesday, June 27 | ||
South Korea vs. Germany | Group F | KOR 2 – GER 0 |
Mexico vs. Sweden | Group F | SWE 3 – MEX 0 |
Serbia vs. Brazil | Group E | BRA 2 – SRB 0 |
Switzerland vs. Costa Rica | Group E | SUI 2 – CRC 2 |
Thursday, June 28 | ||
Japan vs. Poland | Group H | POL 1 - JPN 0 |
Senegal vs. Colombia | Group H | COL 1 - SEN 0 |
England vs. Belgium | Group G | BEL 1 - ENG 0 |
Panama vs. Tunisia | Group G | TUN 2 - PAN 1 |
Knockout Stage | ||
Saturday, June 30 | ||
France vs. Argentina | R16 | FRA 4 – ARG 3 |
Uruguay vs. Portugal | R16 | URU 2 – POR 1 |
Sunday, July 1 | ||
Spain vs. Russia | R16 | RUS 1 (4) – ESP 1 (3) |
Croatia vs. Denmark | R16 | CRO 1 (3) – DEN 1 (2) |
Monday, July 2 | ||
Brazil vs. Mexico | R16 | BRA 2 – MEX 0 |
Belgium vs. Japan | R16 | BEL 3 – JPN 2 |
Tuesday, July 3 | ||
Sweden vs. Switzerland | R16 | SWE 1 – SUI 0 |
Colombia vs. England | R16 | ENG 1 (4) – COL 1 (3) |
Friday, July 6 | ||
France vs. Uruguay | QF | FRA 2 – URU 0 |
Brazil vs. Belgium | QF | BEL 2 – BRA 1 |
Saturday, July 7 | ||
England vs. Sweden | QF | ENG 2 – SWE 0 |
Croatia vs. Russia | QF | CRO 2 (4) – RUS 2 (3) |
Tuesday, July 10 | ||
France vs. Belgium | SF | FRA 1 – BEL 0 |
Wednesday, July 11 | ||
England vs. Croatia | SF | CRO 2 – ENG 1 (AET) |