Haaland double sends Norway into World Cup knockouts — and into Mbappé
Erling Haaland's second double of the tournament has put Norway into the last 32 and set up a heavyweight Group I decider against France, with Kylian Mbappé awaiting in New Jersey.
Norway are through to the knockout stage of the 2026 World Cup after Erling Haaland scored twice in a 3-2 win over Senegal in New Jersey on Monday, a result that also sets up a top-of-the-table collision with France for first place in Group I. The 3-2 scoreline flattered neither side's defending and said everything about the forward now pulling the strings at the other end.
With the group still to settle, Norway's victory carries a second consequence that is harder to ignore: Haaland, the tournament's leading scorer, will go head-to-head with Kylian Mbappé in a match that will decide who finishes top and who must take the harder side of the bracket. A striker in form against a striker in form, with seeding on the line, in a World Cup — the stage has done this to itself.
A game that refused to settle
Norway went ahead and were pegged back, then went ahead again, then held on. Haaland opened the scoring and added a second to become the first player to register two doubles in a single World Cup, a milestone noted by BBC Sport in their live coverage. Senegal's reply came in two pulses — they equalised once before the break and again in stoppage time — but never completed the comeback, leaving them reliant on other results to progress.
The pattern was familiar from Haaland's tournament to date. He scores in clusters, defenders cannot live with his first contact in the box, and Norway's game-plan is increasingly built to feed him. According to BBC Sport, the Manchester City striker described the performance as a "scoring machine" display in his post-match remarks, a turn of phrase that captures a side now operating as a delivery system for one forward.
The Mbappé variable
What changes the stakes is the opponent. ESPN's preview frame called it a "collision course," and the wording is apt. Mbappé has been the tournament's other gravitational centre, and France have looked every bit the depth-and-quality side their squad suggested they would be. The two leading scorers meeting in a group decider, with knockout seeding on the line, is the kind of fixture broadcasters build World Cups around.
There is a tactical sub-plot too. Norway under Ståle Solbakken have been a counter-attacking side willing to concede territory, and that posture is reasonable against most opponents. Against Mbappé, Ousmane Dembélé and the French transitions, the same posture becomes a different question. Senegal, a more direct side than France, managed to create enough to make the scoreline honest. France will create more.
What Norway have actually shown
It is worth resisting the temptation to read the Senegal result as a definitive statement about Norway's ceiling. Senegal are a competent side missing several first-choice players, and Norway's three goals came on the back of individual quality rather than sustained territorial dominance. Al Jazeera's report noted that Senegal "fought back until stoppage time" and that the margin of victory was, in the end, a single goal.
What Norway have shown is simpler and more useful: they have a finisher, they have a structure that gets him the ball in the right areas, and they have the nerve to win a game that was never comfortable. That is enough at this stage of a World Cup. Whether it is enough against France is the only question that matters now.
What the bracket is telling us
Group I remains technically open, but the geometry is straightforward. A Norway win or draw sends them through as group winners; a France win of any description does the same for Les Bleus. The real prize is the side of the draw that follows, and the gap between finishing first and second in a World Cup group is rarely as large as it looks in the group table. It is, however, large enough that both managers will treat the fixture as such.
Senegal, for their part, are not finished. Al Jazeera noted that they "must aim to beat Iraq for a chance to progress," a path that remains alive even after the New Jersey defeat. The margin between a frustrated group-stage exit and a run into the second week is, more often than not, exactly the kind of stoppage-time chance that slipped away on Monday.
The standout in the tournament so far is the one whose name will dominate the next 48 hours of preview copy. Haaland is the leading scorer. Mbappé is the defending champion. The fixture in New Jersey will tell us which of those two facts matters more.
Desk note: Monexus framed this as a striker-led tournament with a clear head-to-head axis, rather than as a Norway-success story or a Senegal-collapse story; the wires differ on emphasis but agree on the scoreline, the goalscorer and the standings implications.
