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World Cup

Egypt's historic knockout win in Dallas reshapes World Cup path

Egypt's penalty‑shootout triumph in Dallas secures the Pharaohs a first‑ever place in the World Cup round of 16, ending a three‑tournament winless streak. The win comes after a 120‑minute deadlock with Australia, where Egypt converted all four spot‑kick attempts, highlighted by Hossam Abdelmaguid's decisive penalty. Egypt entered the 2026 World Cup having never won a knockout match in three previous editions. Their group‑stage victory over New Zealand was the first win of the tournament, ending a long‑standing drought. Earlier in the group, Mohamed Hany also scored an own goal against Belgium, contributing to Egypt’s defensive woes. Emam Ashour opened the scoring twenty minutes in, receiving a cross from Karim Hafez after a set‑piece was blocked and finishing from close range. The early lead gave Egypt control, but Australia pressed for an equaliser. Australia equalised ten minutes into the second half when Aiden O'Neill's free kick deflected off defender Mohamed Hany's head for an own goal. That own goal contributed to a tournament record of thirteen own goals, surpassing the previous high from 2018. Late in the second half, Ramy Rabia's header from a corner was tipped over the bar by goalkeeper Patrick Beach, preserving the deadlock. Both sides then blocked a combined four shots, sending the match into extra time. Tony Popovic, Australia’s manager, replaced Beach with Mathew Ryan before the penalty shootout, hoping for an advantage. In the shootout Egypt scored all four penalties, while Australia missed twice – Harry Souttar’s effort sailed over and Lucas Herrington struck the crossbar. With the shootout victory, Egypt advances to face the winner of the Argentina‑Cape Verde clash in Atlanta. The upcoming tie will determine the Pharaohs’ next opponent in the tournament.

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