27 Mar
Fri
•7:45pm
Wembley Stadium • London
31 Mar
Tue
•7:45pm
Wembley Stadium • London
17 Jun
Wed
•3:00pm
AT&T Stadium • Arlington
23 Jun
Tue
•4:00pm
Gillette Stadium • Boston
27 Jun
Sat
•5:00pm
MetLife Stadium • New York
17 Jun
Wed
•12:00pm
NRG Stadium • Houston
17 Jun
Wed
•8:00pm
Estadio Azteca • Mexico City
23 Jun
Tue
•8:00pm
Estadio Akron • Zapopan
27 Jun
Sat
•7:30pm
Mercedes-Benz Stadium • Atlanta
27 Jun
Sat
•7:30pm
Hard Rock Stadium • Miami
Possession, high pressing and patient build-up define the game plan the English side brings into the 2026 World Cup: playing out cleanly from the back, full-backs pushing very high and midfielders bursting into the box from deep non-stop.
Facing them, the Cafeteros lean into a very different identity: trademark South American flair on the ball, sudden changes of pace, sharp combinations through the middle and wingers who go one-on-one every time they see a gap.
They already met in a dramatic round-of-16 tie in 2018, decided on penalties after a tense 1-1 draw, and were also in the same group back in 1998. That recent history adds extra spice to a clash where every point is priceless: in a World Cup group stage, the smallest detail can be the difference between a team charging into the last 16 or being left hanging by a thread.
Consistent results and tactical evolution have cemented the Brits as one of the powerhouses of the last cycle: a semi-final in 2018, a continental final in 2021 and a quarter-final in Qatar 2022, all driven by the ruthless finishing of Harry Kane and the talent of Jude Bellingham and Bukayo Saka.
The Colombian side, who came within a whisker of the semi-finals in 2014 and remain a leading force in the Copa América, trust in the firepower of Luis Díaz, the calm control of James Rodríguez and the balance provided by a very well-rounded midfield.
Don’t settle for watching from afar: secure your tickets and feel this World Cup showdown between Europe and South America live from the stands.