World Cup 2026: Spain v Argentina countdown, Trump to attend final, England news – live

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Key events

This design seems more advisable than the guy who had England as 2026 winners tattooed. At least Lionel Messi has already won it once.

A tattoo artist in Bangkok, Thailand, doing World Cup designs.
A tattoo artist in Bangkok, Thailand, doing World Cup designs. Photograph: Chalinee Thirasupa/Reuters

Spain’s prime minister Pedro Sánchez has confirmed he will be attending the final on Sunday, setting up a potentially awkward meeting with US president Donald Trump, who has been highly critical of Spain in recent weeks, including threatening at one point to cut off all trade.

The Spanish royal family, including King Felipe, Queen Letizia and their daughters, Princess Leonor and Infanta Sofia, have also confirmed they will attend the final.

In non-World Cup news – not least of which because Thomas Tuchel didn’t take him – West Ham’s Jarrod Bowen has said he intends to remain with the team after the club’s relegation to the Championship.

Fifa introducing 'championship rings' for World Cup winners

I genuinely had to do a double-take when the picture desk sent me this, but Fifa are introducing “championship rings” to the World Cup final, which they say – and I quote – is “bringing [an] iconic American sporting tradition to global football.”

It won’t just be the players who get them, though. They are being made in a limited edition of 2,026, of which 30 go to the winning team, “while 1,996 will be made available to fans worldwide as an Official Licensed Product™, allowing supporters to own a unique piece of FIFA World Cup 2026 history”. Good lord, my eyes.

The new FIFA World Cup Ring for the winner of the 2026 tournament.
The new FIFA World Cup Ring for the winner of the 2026 tournament. Photograph: FIFA

The Fifa press release continues “Immediately after the final, the captain and head coach of the winning team will receive temporary rings to commemorate the occasion. Each of the 30 rings for the winners will then be customised before being officially presented at a later date, ensuring the perfect lifelong fit for an achievement that will echo through eternity.”

The press release does not indicate how much they are charging for the rings.

Philip Cornwall

An absolute humdinger of trivia from Mr Cornwall here …

My most interesting fact – OK, my only interesting fact, and maybe of interest only to me – about the third-place playoff is that for every World Cup from 1982 to 2002, the winners came from Europe but then failed to qualify for the next European Championship:

  • 1982 Poland – third in Euro 84 qualifying group (six points behind sole qualifier)

  • 1986 Belgium – third in Euro 88 qualifying group (two points behind sole qualifier)

  • 1990 Italy – second in Euro 92 qualifying group (three points behind sole qualifier)

  • 1994 Sweden – third in Euro 96 qualifying group (six points behind second qualifier)

  • 1998 Croatia – third in Euro 2000 qualifying group (one point behind a playoff spot)

  • 2002 Turkey – second in Euro 2004 qualifying group, lost in playoff to Latvia (one point behind qualifier)

Germany broke the sequence by qualifying for Euro 2008 (and reaching the final).

Rather more serious than my analysis of UK broadcasters is Ed Aarons’s examination of why England always seem to England it at tournaments.

Martin Belam

Martin Belam

Good afternoon / morning / evening. I shall start by immediately plugging my own piece comparing aspects of ITV and BBC coverage of the World Cup, which you can all no doubt tell me I am wrong about in the comments.

Martin Belam is here to inject some energy into this live blog.

Will you watch the third-place match? I may look at the lineups and make a decision after that.

Wildfires in Canada are causing problems with smoke smoke polluting New York and surrounding areas, with the final set to take place in New Jersey on Sunday. It is anticipated air quality will improve in the coming days but it may be a worry for the players in the meantime.

We have some live sport elsewhere …

Cycling.

Golf

The pitch where Spain forward Lamine Yamal honed his skills ⁠in a working-class, multi-ethnic neighbourhood outside Barcelona was buzzing with life on Thursday as locals looked ahead ⁠with pride to ⁠the World ​Cup final against Lionel Messi’s Argentina.

“Now that the moment has come when the two of them are ⁠going to play against each other, it’s incredible,” said Keba, an 18-year-old Senegalese resident, referring to Barcelona forward Lamine ⁠Yamal’s well-known admiration for Messi.

Messi, 39, enjoyed the peak years of his ​career at Barcelona having come through ‌the club’s youth ‌academy and a viral photograph showing the Argentine with a baby Lamine ‌Yamal, now 19, has captured imaginations ahead of Sunday’s final in New Jersey.

A football court in Rocafonda.
A football court in Rocafonda. Photograph: Albert Gea/Reuters

As children from migrant families played on a pitch behind a mural featuring Lamine Yamal’s face in the Rocafonda neighbourhood, in the coastal city of Mataro, his grandmother, Fatima Nasraoui, and his 15-year-old ‌cousin Rayan watched from a nearby bench.

“I want Spain to win,” she said, adding that she would shout loudly ​if he scores. “To me, Lamine means many good things, but above all he’s like a brother because we grew up together,” his cousin said.

Lamine Yamal, who was born in Spain to a Moroccan father and mother from ⁠Equatorial Guinea, has never forgotten his roots. Throughout his career, ​he has honoured ​Rocafonda with his trademark “304” hand ​gesture after scoring goals - a reference to the neighbourhood’s ​postal code.

During the ‌World Cup, he ​has worn ​a headband with “Rocafonda” on it, donned the flags of his parents’ countries of origin on his boots, and said football was an example of racial and social integration. Reuters

A man walks past a graffiti depicting Lamine Yamal in Rocafonda.
A man walks past a graffiti depicting Lamine Yamal in Rocafonda. Photograph: Josep Lago/AFP/Getty Images

Arsenal Women’s signing Isabella Damm has already met her new colleague Win, the therapy dog.

Isabella Damm and Win have a chat.
Isabella Damm and Win have a chat. Photograph: David Price/Arsenal FC/Getty Images

Phil Grey emails: “There seem to be different ways of thinking about the third place game. In Sweden they think of it like in the Olympics and call it the bronze match with an opportunity to win a medal. In 1994 they were highly motivated to win while Stoichkov and his Bulgarian teammates looked like they’d rather be anywhere other than playing the losers final. Unsurprisingly Sweden won 4-0. If we’d always called it the Bronze Medal Match there would be a different vibe around the whole thing.”

French defender Maxime Esteve has left Burnley and joined RB Leipzig for a reported fee of more than £21million.

The 24-year-old centre-back has signed a contract at the Bundesliga club until 2031 after making 100 appearances for the Clarets since February 2024.

Esteve, who began his career at Montpellier, told his new club’s website: “I learnt a great deal in France and England, and I now want to bring that experience and those qualities to RB Leipzig.

“The club stands for high-intensity, fearless football, continuous progress and big ambitions. That suits me perfectly.” PA Media

All of Burnley’s decent players are leaving …

Will he stay or will he go now?

Krishnamoorthy writes: “Your comment ‘if goals in the final should count more than that in the 3rd place match’ reminds me of this joke.

“Caesar : I killed 2000 gauls

“Very Ambitius: Ave Caesar , it was only 1000

“Caesar: I thought away gauls count twice.”

It’s the way you tell them.

Kylian Mbappe and Lionel Messi are tied on goals in the race for the Golden Boot, although the latter tops of the charts thanks to having one more assist.

Should goals in the final count for more than any in the third-place match?

How wonderful it has been to witness Rodri absolutely thriving at this World Cup. There was a worry when he returned from his ACL injury that he would never be the same again. It has taken him a while to trust his body once more and be able to play to his maximum consistently.

I am mildly suspicious that he has played his final game for Manchester City but we shall see about that in the coming weeks.

Rodri

double quotation markWhen I became a teenager, foosball made way for girlfriends, wine, cigarettes and a job in a casino. Then I met a British woman and we got married. In 1986, with the war ongoing, we left Lebanon to set up home in Manchester. We had a son, a daughter and a foosball table in the kitchen. It remained a hobby until 2004 when I was managing the city’s Hard Rock Casino and bought a table for customers, with a sign: “Beat the manager”. Our weekly challenge had 30 competitors, but I always won.

That nice man Nick Ames answered a load of your questions yesterday. The poor chap really does love Harry Kane but he also loves offal. I do not know which he prefers.

Matthew Hall

double quotation mark“Football survived Sepp Blatter,” Mel Brennan writes, optimistically, in the book. “It survived Jack Warner. It survived Chuck Blazer. And it will survive Gianni Infantino.”

After a week of smelling wildfire smoke, I am finally breathing in some clean air. It is not too windy or too hot, so I am blogging from the garden. This is the dream we’ve all tried to live.

Mittu gets in touch to say: “All this talk and build up to the final and on a (much) lesser scale, the 3/4th playoff is well and good — but I can’t stop and think of what life will be without staying up midnights and waking up early mornings in a couple of days’ time. My biological clock had just adjusted. Maybe good way for me to get interested in the South American leagues and the MLS.”

It’s always an option …

More than 200 countries endorse Infantino for fourth Fifa term

An exclusive from Nick Ames and Matt Hughes.

Gianni Infantino has the formal endorsement of more than 200 countries for re-election as Fifa’s president despite the climate of unrest that has swirled since the scandal surrounding Folarin Balogun’s reprieve from suspension.

The Guardian understands only a handful of Fifa’s 211 member associations are still to send letters of support for Infantino, who is on course to be voted into a fourth term by a landslide at its congress in March. A small number of European countries are among the outliers, with Germany the highest-profile FA yet to provide official backing.

Gianni Infantino is in his third term as Fifa president.
Gianni Infantino is in his third term as Fifa president. Photograph: Daniela Porcelli/Getty Images

Now for something completely different … a match report from 1966.

I do hope the Guardian are pushing my work from Turf Moor in 60 years time. I reckon a sub-editor nowadays would insist on breaking up this intro. But who am I to argue with Cyril Chapman?

double quotation markA new Argentina, discarding traditional defensive methods, and attacking from the first moment of a stimulating game at Villa Park last night, stirred visions of a first-class encounter with West Germany on the same ground on Saturday as they beat Spain through two goals scored by Artime, their irrepressible centre forward.

I am having a look through the European results last night. Looks like it was a cracking ending in Malta where Faroese side NSÍ Runavík knocked out Hamrun Spartans thanks to a 94th-minute penalty. It was so controversial that the police needed to step in while the referee produced a red card.

Referee Jeremy Muller shows a red card to a Hamrun Spartans official.
Referee Jeremy Muller shows a red card to a Hamrun Spartans official. Photograph: Domenic Aquilina/NurPhoto/Shutterstock

Trent Alexander-Arnold said it is “a pleasure” to work with reappointed Real Madrid ⁠manager Jose Mourinho, adding that he has long admired the Portuguese coach and believes he can ⁠help the club ⁠win trophies.

Mourinho ​returned to Real Madrid in June for a second spell after a disappointing campaign last ⁠season in which they missed out on the LaLiga title and were eliminated from the Champions League quarter-finals.

“I ⁠have always admired the coach (Mourinho). I’ve played against him a couple ​of times, and it’s ‌a pleasure to work ‌with him and his team,” Alexander-Arnold said.

“It’s ‌intense. The principles and the level of demand are very high, so I’m looking forward to seeing how, the more we get to know each other, the more we learn and the more he can teach us. And we’re all willing ‌and eager to learn and improve. I’m sure he’ll teach us many things and help us win trophies this ​year.“

Alexander-Arnold, who joined Real Madrid from Liverpool last year, endured an injury-hit first season in Spain and did not always command a regular place in the starting line-up, rotating in and out ⁠of the side.

However, the departure of defender Dani Carvajal in ​May has ​opened an opportunity for Alexander-Arnold ​to establish himself as Madrid’s first-choice right-back.

“I’ve been ​out of action ‌for a long ​time, so ​it’s good to finally be back and to lay a solid foundation for a successful season,” the 27-year-old Englishman added. Reuters

Trent Alexander-Arnold in pre-season training.
Trent Alexander-Arnold in pre-season training. Photograph: Antonio Villalba/Real Madrid/Getty Images

James Moriarty writes: “The thing that is really bothering me, in this endless Brave England’s failure autopsy, is this - Tuchel was, until the semi-final, universally praised for making game changing substitutions. Which is all well and good, but it happened seemingly in every game, which surely points to a bigger issue: namely that NONE of his starting line-ups worked, and games were only won by substitutes changing the course of the match. England were staggeringly lucky to get as far as they did, and were the worst of the semi-finalists by a country mile, so perhaps we should all be grateful that Tommy T has spared the embarrassment of getting humbled by Spain in the final.
Anyway, I’m very much looking forward to France Reserves vs Jordan Henderson XI tomorrow.”

I would argue in the world of five substitutions that there is always a plan to throw the ‘finishers’ on. I think the subs against Norway were rather odd, to be honest, too.

Spanish Prime Minister Pedro Sanchez will attend the World Cup final to see his country take on reigning champions Argentina, his government said Friday.

Sanchez, a vocal critic of US President Donald Trump – who also plans to attend Sunday’s final in New Jersey – will then travel to Algeria for an official visit. AFP

Pedro Sanchez will be at the World Cup final.
Pedro Sanchez will be at the World Cup final. Photograph: Blondet Eliot/ABACA/Shutterstock

Club football is back on the agenda but Pitbull will not stop.

Krishnamoorthy asks: “Who does it better, Carlo Ancelotti or Leo Scaloni? Their (lack of) reaction when a winner is scored in the 96th minute is unreal.”

I am an Ancelotti Ultra.

Carlo Ancelotti is calm and composed.
Carlo Ancelotti is calm and composed. Photograph: William Volcov/Shutterstock

What approach should Tuchel take to the third place game? Try and win it or give everyone some minutes. I think it is fair to give a half each to the goalkeepers, let Watkins and Toney play. Mainoo also deserves time on the pitch.

James Trafford

Donald Trump will attend Sunday’s World Cup final between Spain and Argentina, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said Thursday.

“We look forward ⁠to the final match on Sunday, ​and I know ‌the president ‌looks forward to attending,” Leavitt said. “This is a fitting conclusion to a tournament that showcased America’s ability to host the world on the grandest stage.”

Keir Starmer supports the idea of Fifa investigating Argentina players who displayed a banner touting their country’s claim to the Falklands Islands after their World Cup semi-final win against England, Downing Street has said.

Jeff Rueter

Jeff Rueter

double quotation markAs is true for most of La Albiceleste, pulling on the white-and-blue turns Romero into one of 11 bleeding hearts who leave no yard uncovered and no stud unshown for the good of the cause. Partnered with Lisandro Martínez, he is the relative hardman, often the final obstacle between an attacker and Emiliano Martínez. Save for Lionel Messi and the Aston Villa goalkeeper, Romero has arguably been Argentina’s most consistent player en route to their third World Cup final in four tournaments.

Aaron Timms

Over in America, Fox’s World Cup coverage goes under the microscope as it enjoys a final hurrah.

double quotation markGoodbye to Geoff Shreeves, Fox’s middle-aged Oliver Twist chirruping on the sideline for the approval of his American masters. Goodbye to Tom Rinaldi, to his pocket squares and his “lyrical” meditations on balls and planets and stars or whatever. Goodbye to Chef Nick, now forced to rein in the extravagance of his early contributions (kangaroo corndogs, fufu chicken tikka masala) in the face of the tournament’s gastronomically subdued final four. And goodbye to Jameis Winston, the Fox fan correspondent, whose distressingly antic and sweaty stadium dispatches gave him the unvarying appearance of a man being electrocuted in the middle of a baptism.

We shall begin with the latest coming out of the England camp.

Thomas Tuchel is sticking about. Maybe he will download Football Manager and avoid the temptation of going Ultra Defensive.

Unsurprisingly, the players were a bit bemused by the tactics that saw them crash out.

Barney Ronay points out the bigger problems facing England than nonsensical subs.

Why everything went wrong … in numbers.

Preamble

We can all be sure that the England postmortem will continue for a little while longer, even if there is the pointless nature of the bronze medal match on Saturday to look forward to. Thomas Tuchel’s bizarre substitutions have seemingly not cost him his job, so we cannot drag that conversation out much longer.

Hopefully, the more interesting stuff on this fine Friday is getting excited about the final. Lionel Messi v Lamine Yamal and all that jazz. It should be a fascinating encounter between one very good team and an excellent one, you can decide which is which.

We will bring you all the latest and probably chuck in a few curve balls too.

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