To ensure competitive balance in the 2026 FIFA World Cup, Spain, Argentina, and France have been placed on separate knockout paths, preventing them from facing each other before the semifinals.
FIFA stated that the top four ranked teams—Spain, Argentina, France, and England—will occupy four different paths, meaning they can only meet in the semifinal or final stages.
Argentina, who defeated France in a tiebreaker three years ago in Qatar, will again avoid an early rematch until at least the semifinals.
After pot one teams are assigned, remaining groups will be filled with teams from pots two, three, and four. Only UEFA may have two teams in a group, as it has 16 teams participating. Other confederations will have a maximum of one team per group. This structure ensures at least four groups feature two UEFA teams.
The 48 teams’ names are placed in balls by pot, with separate balls indicating group positions 1–4. The draw begins with pot one, assigning each team sequentially to the top slot of a group. Hosts already know their groups, while the remaining nine teams from pot one are placed in groups C, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, and L.
Pots two, three, and four are drawn in order, with each team placed randomly in remaining group positions.
The FIFA World Cup 2026 kicks off next June in the United States. Tonight’s draw at the John F. Kennedy Center in Washington, D.C., presided over by U.S. President Donald Trump with FIFA President Gianni Infantino present, will decide the groups and give a preview of each team’s tournament path. The draw starts at 12 PM local time, 11 PM Bangladesh time, with the schedule published the following day. The event will be streamed live on FIFA’s official website and YouTube channel.
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