Sunday’s World Cup action featured emphatic wins for Germany and Sweden, alongside a ding-dong encounter between the Netherlands and Japan.
We’ve recapped all the happenings from matchday four, including what you missed overnight and the biggest stories from Sunday’s action.
World Cup Day 4: Germany thrash Curacao, Five-star Sweden
Ruthless Germany destroy record-breaking debutants Curacao
For Curacao, just being at the World Cup is a monumental achievement. The tiny Caribbean nation has become the smallest ever to compete at the tournament, with a population of around 155,000 people, fewer than those who live in Warrington.
An opening clash with perennial powerhouse Germany was a glamour tie to open up, and Curacao stunned everyone when Livano Comenencia cancelled out Felix Nmecha’s early opener.
However, a shock result was not on the cards. Germany stepped on the gas, and tore apart the island outfit with ease. After Nico Schlotterbeck put Germany back in front, it was one-way traffic that did not slow down. Germany had four by half-time, and seven at the final whistle.
7 – Only five FIFA World Cup matches this century have seen a team score 7+ goals, while three of those five have been by 🇩🇪 Germany:
8-0 v Saudi Arabia (2002)
7-1 v Brazil (2014)
7-1 v Curaçao (2026)Ruthless. pic.twitter.com/PGDJBl73Bg
— OptaJoe (@OptaJoe) June 14, 2026
Read –Â Alisson reveals he sat out Liverpool games to prepare for World Cup
Netherlands and Japan go toe-to-toe in thriller
The Netherlands against Japan was billed as one of the clashes of the group stage, with a talented Oranje side squaring off against a Japanese outfit unbeaten in nine games against European opponents.
An end-to-end game saw both teams create chances, with the game exploding after a goalless first half. Virgil van Dijk capitalised on a significant height advantage to head the Dutch in front, only for Keito Nakamura to equalise six minutes later.
The momentum swung back in favour of the Netherlands on 64 minutes, when West Ham winger Crysencio Summerville wiggled room and fired in his first international goal. However, Japan were not to be denied and extended their European hoodoo when Daichi Kamada rose highest to head home a late equaliser.
Japan steal a point against the Netherlands with an 88th-minute equalizer 😯🇳🇱 pic.twitter.com/p1yeBn17nN
— B/R Football (@brfootball) June 14, 2026
Read – How to watch World Cup highlights this summer
Ivory Coast leave it late to sink Ecuador
Ivory Coast snatched the points against Ecuador in Philadelphia to take a huge step towards the knockout rounds. With Germany and Curacao the other sides in the group, this fixture was billed as big for both side’s chances of progress.
Ecuador dominated the opening exchanges, and twice his the woodwork in an entertaining first 45 minutes. The South Americans finished behind only Argentina in South America’s qualifying, and their quality was on show.
After the break, it was the Ivory Coast’s turn to hit the crossbar when Elye Wahi went close, and it seemed set to be a point shared as the clock ticked towards the final whistle. Enter, Amad Diallo. On as a substitute, the Manchester United man superbly side-footed home a 90th-minute winner as the Ivorians claimed the points.
Better late than never 💫
Amad Diallo’s 90th minute winner that sunk Ecuadorian hearts… pic.twitter.com/47w7SARnF9
— ITV Football (@itvfootball) June 15, 2026
Read – The youngest players to ever feature at a World Cup
Super sub Svenberg helps five-star Sweden thrash TunisiaÂ
Sweden’s route to the World Cup was arduous, but they’re making up for it now. Graham Potter’s side could hardly have wished for a better start to their campaign after a 5-1 thrashing of Tunisia.
A perfect night saw big hitters Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyokeres both on target, while Mattias Svanberg scored the second-fastest goal by a substitute in FIFA World Cup history, just 18 seconds after his arrival from the bench.
Talk about an instant impact 😮🇸🇪
Mattias Svanberg scored just 18 seconds after coming off the bench. pic.twitter.com/dP8kgfKzFc
— Match of the Day (@BBCMOTD) June 15, 2026
Yasin Ayari added two early Goal of the Tournament contenders as the Swedes stormed to a big win. Confidence is up.
Read –Â The most pointless Premier League transfers in 2025/26
See Also – The best football kits we’ll see at FIFA World Cup 2026





