Article may be outdated

This article is 10 days old. Some details may have changed since publication.

MARCA·2 min read·easy

Switzerland to face Argentina in the World Cup quarterfinals after penalty shootout win over Colombia

M
Matias Wodner
Switzerland to face Argentina in the World Cup quarterfinals after penalty shootout win over Colombia
AI Summary

Switzerland advanced to the 2026 World Cup quarterfinals after defeating Colombia 4-3 in a penalty shootout following a scoreless draw. The Swiss team will face defending champions Argentina in the next round at Arrowhead Stadium.

Ruben Vargas converted his penalty and Switzerland advanced to the World Cup quarterfinals with a 4-3 shootout win over Colombia after a scoreless draw on Tuesday. Switzerland will next face defending champion Argentina on Saturday at Arrowhead Stadium in Kansas City, Missouri. Argentina defeated Egypt 3-2 earlier in the day. Switzerland had not reached the quarterfinals of a World Cup since hosting the tournament in 1954. And the Swiss were shorthanded Tuesday without young midfielder Johan Manzambi, who was injured in training on Monday. Vargas, who has scored two goals in the World Cup, also left Monday’s training early but was available off the bench and came on in stoppage time at the end of regulation. Colombia defender Davinson Sanchez’s penalty attempt hit the crossbar and Switzerland goalkeeper Gregor Kobel saved an attempt by Cucho Hernandez, giving the Swiss the edge in the shootout. FIFA President Gianni Infantino was among those at BC Place, where the sellout crowd was overwhelmingly clad in yellow in support of Colombia. Colombia failed to qualify for the last World Cup in 2022. The team made the quarterfinals at the 2014 tournament in Brazil, defeating Uruguay in the round of 16 before losing to the host country 2-1. The Swiss reached the round of 16 at the past three World Cups but failed to advance with a smaller field of 32 teams. The match was tightly contested by two teams with contrasting styles, the Swiss with a more organized approach and Colombia more attack oriented. Switzerland had a slight edge in possession but both teams had two shots on goal.

Continue reading on Headlinne

Create a free account to read the full article.

Read full article →
entertainmentsports

Get the full story

Sign up for Headlinne to unlock AI insights, political bias analysis, and your personalized news feed.

Create free account

Already have an account? Sign in