
Brazil 1-2 Norway: Haaland's Stunning Brace Knocks Five-Time Champions Out of World Cup
By OUR REPORTER · 06/07/2026 5:51 AM · 4 min read
Erling Haaland produced another defining performance on football's biggest stage as Norway stunned five-time champions Brazil 2-1 on Sunday to reach the FIFA World Cup quarter-finals for the first time in the nation's history.
The Manchester City striker struck twice in the closing stages to send Carlo Ancelotti's Brazil crashing out at the Round of 16, before Neymar's stoppage-time penalty proved nothing more than a consolation for the South Americans.
Norway's famous victory sets up a mouth-watering quarter-final clash against England, while Brazil are left to reflect on another painful early World Cup exit after failing to capitalise on a host of missed opportunities.

Brazil controlled much of the contest but were repeatedly frustrated by Norway goalkeeper Orjan Nyland, whose outstanding display laid the foundation for one of the biggest upsets of the tournament.
The Selecao were handed a golden opportunity to take an early lead in the 14th minute after winning a penalty.
However, Bruno Guimarães squandered the chance as Nyland guessed correctly to save his spot-kick following the midfielder's hesitant, stuttering run-up.
It proved to be a pivotal moment.
Brazil continued to dominate possession and create chances throughout the first half, with Vinicius Junior forcing another excellent save from Nyland, who denied the Real Madrid forward at his near post.
The Norwegian goalkeeper's heroics continued after the break.
Substitute Endrick missed Brazil's clearest opportunity when Vinicius played him clean through on goal, only for the young striker to poke his effort wide of the post.

Ancelotti introduced Neymar in the 68th minute for only his second appearance of the tournament, hoping the veteran playmaker could unlock Norway's disciplined defence. Instead, the game belonged to Haaland.
With 79 minutes played, Andreas Schjelderup delivered an inviting cross into the penalty area and Haaland rose above Arsenal defender Gabriel to power a towering header beyond Alisson and hand Norway the lead.
The goal stunned Brazil and shifted momentum decisively in Norway's favour.
Brazil desperately searched for an equaliser, but Nyland continued to frustrate them, producing a sensational recovery save to prevent defender Kristoffer Ajer from inadvertently turning the ball into his own net. Then came Haaland's moment of brilliance.
With 90 minutes on the clock, the striker collected possession outside Brazil's penalty area before unleashing a powerful low drive that beat Alisson and nestled inside the corner, sending Norway's supporters into wild celebration.
Brazil were handed a lifeline deep into stoppage time when they were awarded another penalty.
This time, Neymar stepped forward and calmly converted to reduce the deficit.
But there was no time left for another comeback.

The final whistle confirmed one of the biggest shocks of the 2026 FIFA World Cup as Norway eliminated one of football's traditional giants.

Haaland's remarkable performance continued his extraordinary goalscoring run for Norway.
His brace took his tally to seven goals at the tournament, drawing him level with Lionel Messi and Kylian Mbappe in the race for the Golden Boot.
The two goals also extended an astonishing streak of scoring in 14 consecutive competitive international matches for Norway.
The 25-year-old has now scored 62 goals in just 54 appearances for his country, further cementing his status as one of world football's most prolific forwards.

Norway's victory secures the country's first-ever appearance in a FIFA World Cup quarter-final and represents one of the greatest achievements in its football history.
The Scandinavians have impressed throughout the tournament with their discipline, organisation and clinical finishing, qualities that were again evident against Brazil.
Standing between them and an unprecedented semi-final place is England, who await in what promises to be one of the standout quarter-final ties of the tournament.
For Brazil, the defeat will be remembered as a night of missed opportunities.
Guimaraes first-half penalty miss proved costly, while Endrick and Vinicius were both denied by a superb Nyland.
Despite dominating long periods of the contest, Brazil lacked the cutting edge required to break down Norway before Haaland punished every defensive lapse.
The emotional scenes at full-time reflected the magnitude of the disappointment, with Neymar appearing in tears after what could prove to be his final FIFA World Cup appearance.
Instead of Brazil extending their pursuit of a sixth world title, it is Norway who march into the last eight carrying genuine belief that their remarkable World Cup journey is far from over.
Written by
Our Reporter
SkyHigh NewsHub correspondent.
