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World Cup Upset: Haaland Double Eliminates Brazil as Norway Reaches Quarter-Finals

By Sachit Subba Football • Jul 05, 2026 23:28 PM • 518 views

World Cup Upset: Haaland Double Eliminates Brazil as Norway Reaches Quarter-Finals

MIAMI — History will record this as the night Erling Haaland bent the international football landscape to his will.

For the Seleção, this is an unprecedented sporting disaster. Not since 1990 have the South American giants failed to reach the last eight of a World Cup. As the final whistle blew, Neymar stood frozen, weeping openly on the turf after what was an unprecedented sporting disaster. For the Seleção, this is an unprecedented sporting disaster. Not since 1990 have the South American giants failed to reach the last eight of a World Cup. As the final whistle blew, Neymar stood frozen, weeping openly on the turf after what is almost certainly his final bow on the global stage. Yet the night belonged completely to Haaland, whose late double shifted the match decisively and pulled him level with Kylian Mbappé and Lionel Messi at the summit of the Golden Boot race. minutes. Norway defender Kristoffer Ajer committed a rash, clumsy challenge on Matheus Cunha inside the area, leaving the referee with no choice but to point to the spot. Then came the moment that will dominate the post-mortem in Rio and São Paulo. Rather than Vinícius Jr or Neymar stepping up, Bruno Guimarães took the responsibility. The travelling Brazilian fans were baffled, and that confusion turned to exasperation when Orjan Nyland guessed correctly, diving to his left to push Guimarães’ spot-kick away.

Brazil dominated possession thereafter, but the Norwegians' tactical rigidity, combined with the energy-sapping humidity, gradually wore the favourites down.

Solbakken’s Masterstroke Alters History

Recognising his side was flagging, Norway manager Ståle Solbakken made a double tactical switch at the interval that altered the match's trajectory. Off went both starting wingers; on came Andreas Schjelderup and Oscar Bobb. It was a masterstroke that gave Haaland the service he had lacked in the first half. The breakthrough arrived in the 79th minute. Schjelderup found space on the flank and delivered a looping cross into the heart of the penalty box. Rising above a static Brazilian backline, Haaland met the ball with thumping authority, sending a bullet header past Ederson.

Eleven minutes later, the pair struck again. With Brazil pushing bodies forward in desperation, Schjelderup turned provider once more, feeding Haaland on the edge of the area. Exhausted from tracking back, the Manchester City forward still summoned the power to unleash a venomous strike from distance that flew into the back of the net. In the dugout, a grim-faced Ancelotti could only watch in disbelief.ief.

"I peaked a couple of times in this tournament, but every now and then I get a new peak," Haaland said afterwards, having now scored in an astonishing 14 consecutive competitive matches. "If I get a chance or two, it usually turns into a goal. I don't know how I do it, but that's how I am. It's about being focused.

The Final Whistle and the Viking Roar

Neymar did manage to convert a consolation penalty deep into the tenth minute of stoppage time, but it did nothing to mask the gravity of the result. When the final whistle sounded, Haaland celebrated by leading the travelling Norwegian faithful in their Viking thunderclap, banging a drum as a sea of despondent yellow shirts streamed toward the exits.

"I said to the boys today that I don't think it's 50-50, but we have a fair chance if we play at our best and have match winners, and we had that," a proud Solbakken remarked.

For Brazil, the post-mortem will be brutal. The defeat ensures their longest-ever World Cup drought—dating back to their last triumph in 2002—will extend to nearly three decades by the time the next tournament arrives.

"It’s inexplicable," a shattered Marquinhos admitted. "We have to take responsibility for this so that future generations can build on it."

Norway now marches on to face either England or Mexico in the quarter-finals, no longer just participants, but genuine disruptors of the established order.

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