Live Wire
09:10ZWARTRANSLAExplosions have been reported in the Russian city of Voronezh.Explosions have been reported in the Russian ci…09:09ZCLASHREPORPakistan’s PM Shehbaz Sharif:Alhamdulillah, the First High-Level Committee Meeting under the framework of the…09:09ZSCMPNEWSSouth Korea’s ex-justice minister jailed for 25 years over martial law bidhttps://www.scmp.com/news/asia/east…09:08ZTHECANARYU22 June 2026📰 Skwawkbox: Trump humiliates Starmer and outs resignationDonald Trump jumped the gun and confir…09:08ZTASNIMNEWSIta was out of reach🔹 Ita Messenger has been unavailable a few minutes ago.09:08ZAMKMAPPINGThe Storm Shadow cruise missiles seemingly targeted the Voronezh semiconductor assembly factory.09:08ZWARMONITORKeir Starmer says he'll step down as UK Labour Party leader, will remain UK prime minister until successor ch…09:08ZSCMPNEWS24 drivers arrested, over 4,000 tickets issued in crackdown on errant road usershttps://www.scmp.com/news/hon…
Markets
S&P 500746.58 0.02%Nasdaq26,518 1.91%Nasdaq 10030,406 2.48%Dow515.49 0.01%Nikkei96.38 0.12%China 5033.38 0.24%Europe87.52 0.85%DAX41.81 0.70%BTC$64,124 0.34%ETH$1,747 1.20%BNB$592.77 0.81%XRP$1.14 0.71%SOL$73.86 1.08%TRX$0.3304 1.17%HYPE$67.4 0.48%DOGE$0.0835 0.62%RAIN$0.0144 0.05%LEO$9.53 0.55%QQQ$740.23 0.06%VOO$688.21 0.01%VTI$369.54 0.12%IWM$295.1 0.17%ARKK$79.5 0.86%HYG$80.09 0.10%Gold$386.17 0.25%Silver$60 0.82%WTI Crude$114.11 0.66%Brent$43.51 0.84%Nat Gas$12.1 3.07%Copper$38.77 0.23%EUR/USD1.1467 0.00%GBP/USD1.3233 0.00%USD/JPY161.23 0.00%USD/CNY6.7693 0.00%
CLOSEDNYSEopens in 4h 18m
The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 173
Monday, 22 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 09:11 UTC
  • UTC09:11
  • EDT05:11
  • GMT10:11
  • CET11:11
  • JST18:11
  • HKT17:11
← The MonexusSports

Salah drags Egypt to a first World Cup win 92 years in the making

Mohamed Salah scored once and created another as Egypt came from behind to beat New Zealand 3-1, delivering the Pharaohs their first World Cup victory 92 years after their tournament debut.

Mohamed Salah celebrates after putting Egypt ahead against New Zealand in their FIFA World Cup 2026 group-stage match on 21 June 2026. CBS Sports

Ninety-two years is a long wait for a first. Mohamed Salah scored once and assisted another as Egypt came from behind to beat New Zealand 3-1 in their second Group-stage match of FIFA World Cup 2026 on the evening of 21 June 2026 (kick-off reported by CBS Sports at 21:00 UTC), delivering the Pharaohs their first ever victory at a men's World Cup finals tournament, on their eighth appearance. According to BBC Sport, the result puts Salah's side level on points at the top of the group and lifts the weight of a national record that had grown heavier with every cycle.

Egypt had not won a World Cup match since the tournament's early decades. Across seven previous finals appearances the national team had drawn three and lost the rest, a run that made every appearance feel like a referendum on the squad rather than a football match. Sunday's result, secured with goals from Salah, a Salah-created equaliser, and a late third, breaks that pattern in the most public way possible: on a global stage, in a tournament co-hosted across the United States, Canada and Mexico, against an opponent who arrived with a point already in hand.

A 92-year weight, lifted in 90 minutes

The line that ran through every post-match dispatch was the length of the wait. BBC Sport framed the night as "Salah's World Cup nightmare ends," a reference to a forward whose international career has repeatedly been measured against performances that have not arrived on the biggest stages. Sky Sports and ESPN ran with the same spine: Salah led, Egypt delivered, and history changed category from "long-suffering participant" to "winner at a World Cup finals." That framing is not editorial excess. Egypt's record at the tournament is thin enough that the milestone is genuinely novel, and the second-cycle goal — set up by a Salah intervention and finished by a teammate — was the moment the dugout exhaled.

The match itself was not a procession. New Zealand took the lead, and Egypt had to chase the game for stretches of the first half. According to BBC Sport's minute-by-minute coverage, the scores were level at the interval before Salah's goal turned the contest on its head just after the hour mark. The structure matters: a first World Cup win is not a coronation if the opponent is rolled over. This was a comeback, and a come-from-behind win at a World Cup finals is a more durable kind of first.

Salah, the goals record, and the question of legacy

The subtext across the BBC, Sky Sports and ESPN coverage is that Sunday night was a referendum on Salah's standing inside the Egyptian national team record books. BBC Sport's live feed noted that the goal took Salah "towards the all-time goalscorers record for the Pharaohs," a benchmark that has, until now, defined the end of his international career as much as the beginning. The framing is gentle but pointed: a player who has spent more than a decade at the top of European club football can now point to a result on the World Cup stage that no Egyptian has produced before him.

ESPN's longer piece, published in the small hours of 22 June 2026 (UTC), places the night in a wider context: "World Cup 2026 is proving to be a step too far for some of soccer's ageing stars." The implicit contrast is that Salah, now in his mid-thirties, did not fold into that category. He scored, he created, and his side won. The reading is fair, though it deserves a caveat: Egypt's group is not stacked with the kind of opposition that punishes a tired forward, and New Zealand, despite their point, are a limited side by FIFA ranking.

A group still in play

The win moves Egypt level on points with their group rivals, with one match remaining. The CBS Sports previews of Sunday's fixtures had framed the game as a "both teams are on a point" contest where the winner would "boost their chances of advancing," a sober description that undersold the historical weight. With the group now wide open, the second-cycle equation is simple: Egypt need a result in their final match to guarantee progression; New Zealand need something they have never produced at a World Cup finals, a second win in the same tournament.

The betting markets treated the game as a coin flip. CBS Sports' expert picks carried New Zealand vs Egypt alongside Uruguay vs Cape Verde as the two Sunday fixtures worth a wager, and SportsLine's Jon Eimer had backed the contest as part of a 21-9 expert run. The prices imply that the Egyptian win is a result, not an inevitability. Group-stage football at this level is decided by the thinnest margins, and Egypt will need a sharper performance against higher-ranked opposition if the second cycle is to extend past the group.

What remains uncertain

The sources do not specify the venue for the match, the attendance, or the identity of the other Egyptian goalscorers beyond Salah's contribution. The official line-ups and post-match disciplinary notes are not in the wire copy reviewed for this piece, and the FIFA match report will settle those details. There is also no settled read on the wider group arithmetic: a win over New Zealand keeps Egypt's destiny in their own hands but does not resolve the seeding or opponent permutations for the round of 16, and the final group fixtures will decide that.

The honest summary is this: Egypt have done something they have not done in 92 years, and Salah was the obvious author of the moment. Whether Sunday night becomes a hinge for the rest of the tournament, or a single bright entry in a campaign that ends at the group stage, is a question the next match, not this one, will answer.

— Monexus framed this as a milestone, not a coronation. The wire copy across BBC, Sky Sports and ESPN was unanimous on the historic weight; Monexus adds the caveat that the group is still open and the harder fixtures are still to come.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire