Japan and Sweden both squeeze into the World Cup knockouts as Elanga's stunner cancels out Maeda's opener
A team-goal finish from Daizen Maeda and a long-range equaliser from Anthony Elanga saw Japan and Sweden play out a 1-1 draw in Dallas that sent both sides into the World Cup round of 32.

Japan and Sweden will both play on at the World Cup after a 1-1 draw at Dallas Stadium in the final Group F fixture, settled by Daizen Maeda's well-worked opener and Anthony Elanga's long-range equaliser. The result, confirmed at full-time in the early hours of 26 June 2026 UTC, was enough to send both sides through to the round of 32 — Japan as group runners-up, Sweden in third after results elsewhere broke their way.
The draw, the second of the night for both teams, leaves Japan still chasing a first knockout victory at a men's World Cup and Sweden facing a stiffer test of their squad depth in the next round. The shape of the evening was set by the two moments of quality that defined it: a move of obvious preparation and a strike of obvious individual skill.
A team goal, then a counter-punch
Japan took the lead through a goal that broadcasters and post-match reaction both flagged as the product of rehearsed movement rather than improvisation. Daizen Maeda supplied the finish, arriving into the right area at the right time to turn in a move the Japan squad had clearly practised. According to BBC Sport's match report, Maeda's "smart finish" rewarded a "team goal" built across the front line, the kind of constructed chance that has become a feature of the way Hajime Moriyasu's side attack in this tournament.
Sweden's reply came from the opposite register — a solo act, struck from the edge of the area, curling away from the goalkeeper. Anthony Elanga's effort was the moment that re-lit the game. BBC Sport's live text rendered the reaction in two words: "Oh my word!", a fair summary of a strike that left the Japan keeper with no realistic chance. Sky Sports credited the goal with "book[ing] Sweden's spot in the World Cup knockout stages," underlining how much weight the one moment carried for the Swedes' tournament trajectory. The 1-1 scoreline then held, with neither side forcing a winner in the time that remained.
Japan's ceiling, and the ceiling they've already hit
For Japan, the immediate arithmetic is mixed. Second place in Group F means a place in the last 32, and ESPN's reporting on the night framed the draw as confirmation of progress — but it also underscored the harder reading. The piece noted that Japan are "still dreaming of winning the World Cup," a phrasing that captures both the squad's stated ambition and the gap between that ambition and the record. Japan have now reached the knockout stage at consecutive men's World Cups, having exited in the round of 16 in Qatar in 2022, and a draw that delivers them to the same door is, by the team's own standards, only the entry fee.
The harder test is what comes next. Per the same ESPN write-up, Japan will now "face Brazil" in the round of 32, a tie that pits an organised, technically fluent Asian side against one of the pre-tournament favourites. Sweden, by contrast, take a different path: third place in the group still carries them into the knockouts, but on a route shaped by the wider results across groups E, G, H and so on. The contrast — a fixed, heavyweight opponent for Japan, a more contingent path for Sweden — frames the rest of their tournaments.
Group F, in plain terms
Group F's final standings are easy to read at the top and more congested below. The two sides that contested this match finished the group stage on four points each, level on points but separated on tiebreakers, with Japan in second and Sweden in third. Group F's automatic qualifiers through the conventional first-and-second route were settled before the final whistle in some of the other groups, and Sweden's progression as one of the better third-placed teams was, in practice, half-fixed and half-conditional going into the closing minutes.
That structural feature of an expanded 32-team knockout bracket is worth naming plainly: third place is no longer a dead end. A draw on the night was, for Sweden, an acceptable functional result — but only because the wider results elsewhere stayed favourable. The 1-1 scoreline did the work the Swedes needed; the rest was bookkeeping.
Stakes, and the questions the night did not answer
What the draw did answer is the immediate question both sets of fans had arrived with: are we still in the tournament at the weekend? For Japan, yes. For Sweden, also yes. Both teams now have a knockout fixture to prepare for, and the rest of the field knows who they are.
What it did not answer is the harder one — namely, what either side is, on this evidence, actually capable of. Japan produced a goal of clear design and conceded one of clear individual quality, which is a long way from a clean performance on either side of the ball. Sweden showed they can stay in games against technically organised opposition but, again on this evidence, did not look like a side ready to dictate one. The knockout rounds will sharpen that picture quickly. For now, the ledger is simple: two teams through, two team goals of different kinds on the scoresheet, and a round of 32 draw that will give each of them a sterner read on where they stand.
How Monexus framed this vs the wire: the dominant wires led on the result and on the two goal-scorers, with ESPN emphasising Japan's next-round opponent and Sky Sports leading on Sweden's progression. This piece leads on the goal events in the order they happened, then reads Japan's progression against the heavier test the bracket now hands them.