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The Monexus
Vol. I · No. 176
Thursday, 25 June 2026
Saturday Ed.
Updated 17:30 UTC
  • UTC17:30
  • EDT13:30
  • GMT18:30
  • CET19:30
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← The MonexusSports

Group stage closes at the 2026 World Cup: what Thursday's slate actually decides

The last group-stage day in the 2026 World Cup hands the United States, the Netherlands and Germany their final tune-ups — and a few teams one last chance to avoid the bracket they don't want.

Sergino Dest in USMNT kit during the 2026 World Cup. CBS Sports / Imagn Images

The 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage closes on Thursday 25 June with four matches that will settle the final standings in the pools involving the United States, the Netherlands and Germany, and decide which sides carry seeding — and which carry a harder knockout draw — into the round of 16. For the U.S. and the Dutch, the day's work is partly ceremonial: both have already secured top spot. For everyone else in their groups, the math is real.

Thursday's slate is the rare matchday where competitive pressure and squad-management pressure sit on the same pitch at the same time. The U.S. and Türkiye meet in a Group D fixture that, per CBS Sports' live stream guide, has the U.S. already through as group winners and Türkiye already eliminated, with both managers now balancing rotation against rhythm. The Dutch face Tunisia in a match they are widely expected to win; a draw or worse would cede the group and the seeding that comes with it. Germany meet Ecuador in a contest with top-of-the-table implications. None of these are friendlies. All of them are being treated, by at least one camp, like the last rehearsal before the tournament that actually starts next week.

A group won, a group lost, and the price of both

The clearest story on the card is the U.S. men's national team's situation. Per CBS Sports' previews, the U.S. have already topped Group D heading into Thursday's fixture against Türkiye, which means manager Mauricio Pochettino can rotate, rest yellow-card accumulators, and audition players for the round of 16. Türkiye arrive eliminated. The temptation, in that asymmetry, is to call the match a dead rubber. The live stream guide flags exactly that risk: with both sides potentially experimenting, the value of the result drops while the value of the performance — clean sheets, sharpness, minutes for squad players — climbs.

The Netherlands, by contrast, are still working for something. CBS Sports' preview of the Tunisia match notes the Dutch are looking to win the group and "build momentum ahead of the knockout stages." That phrasing matters: in a 48-team World Cup, the difference between first and second in the group is the difference between a round-of-16 opponent that finished third in a softer pool and one that finished second in a tougher one. With Virgil van Dijk anchoring the back line, the Dutch will not need reminding.

The middle match Germany cannot afford to sleep through

Germany–Ecuador is the day's most consequential fixture. Per the Germany vs. Ecuador preview from SportsLine's Jon Eimer, Germany are expected to win and have done so convincingly through the group stage, but Ecuador arrived at this tournament with the most coherent South American qualifying campaign of any non-host side. A German win secures the group and, more importantly, a winnable round-of-16 draw. A draw or loss drops Germany into the harder half of the bracket and turns the round of 16 from a fixture into a problem.

The Tunisian angle, smaller but real, deserves air. Tunisia vs. Netherlands is functionally the Dutch's group-stage final, but Tunisia are not a polite opponent; they have a midfield that presses in coordinated waves and a goalkeeper who has saved more than his expected goals conceded across the group stage. The Eimer model is a model, not a result.

What the betting markets are saying

SportsLine's Jon Eimer has documented a 31-13 betting record cited in CBS Sports' Netherlands–Tunisia preview, and a 21-12 record cited in the Germany–Ecuador and U.S.–Türkiye previews. Those records are themselves a market signal: the same handicapper pricing all three of Thursday's marquee fixtures offers an internal consistency check that single-game tipsters cannot. The published picks lean Netherlands, Germany, and — with caveats around rotation — U.S. moneyline as a small favourite. Sportsbooks broadly agree; the prices on the underdogs in all three matches reflect the gap in squad depth rather than the gap in form.

A counter-read is worth naming. The strongest counter-argument to the favourite-moneyline consensus is the rotation risk on the U.S. side and the Ecuador counter-attack profile against Germany's high line. Both factors compress the favourite spread. They do not flip the favourites; they narrow the margin.

What this day is actually for

Read narrowly, Thursday is a closing-the-books day. Read as the warm-up lap it is, it sets the conditions for the round of 16: who carries momentum, who carries a knock, who rests, who plays. The U.S. get the most latitude — a group already won, an opponent already out, and a manager who has spent the tournament talking about depth as a feature, not a bug. The Dutch get the most pressure — a winnable group against a side that will not roll over, with seeding on the line. The Germans get the most upside, and the largest downside if they let Ecuador dictate the tempo.

By Friday morning UTC, the group stage will be a closed book, and the bracket will be a settled fact. What Thursday's four matches decide is the shape of that book: which teams enter the knockouts as favourites, which as survivors, and which as the side of the draw that nobody wanted to be on.

Desk note: Monexus framed Thursday's slate around the actual competitive stakes in each group — rotation math for the U.S., group-winning math for the Netherlands and Germany — rather than running the betting previews straight. The handicapper record is cited as market context, not as a pick.

© 2026 Monexus Media · reported from the wire