Reader questions for Luis de la Fuente, the Spain coach?
Sid Lowe is due to interview the Spain coach, and he'd like your help. You, the reader, send in questions for him to ask? Email john.brewin@theguardian.com or post below the line.
Addendum: You now have a bit longer, as Sid and Luis de la Fuente will be speaking later than planned. Keep them coming.
Key events
That concludes the blog for today. We will be back tomorrow. Here's where the last 16 begins.
Reuters have put together a piece on the Duke of Lisbon pub â in the Juarez neighbourhood of Mexico City, where “​Mexican cooks turn out fish and chips that homesick Brits insist are better than some versions back home. Behind the bar, the venue's British-Mexican management team is keeping things amicable.
“By kick-off time, â the pub, which has a long wooden bar and copies of the Encyclopaedia Britannica on the walls, will be awash in green shirts and white shirts, with staff weaving between fans of both sides with pints of bitter â and plates of chicken tikka masala or bangers and mash.â€
Sounds heavenly.
Transfer news: It's widely reported a fee has been agreed between Besiktas and Arsenal for Leandro Trossard, who has been a useful player for the Gunners. No deal is expected to be completed while Belgium are still in the World Cup. They next face Team USA on Monday evening local time.
Teams from Canada v Morocco
Canada: Crepeau, Johnston, De Fougerolles, Bombito, Laryea, Buchanan, Sigur, Stephen Eustaquio, Ahmed, Jonathan David, Oluwaseyi. Subs: St. Clair, Goodman, Jones, Waterman, Choiniere, Larin, Millar, Cornelius, Shaffelburg, Davies, Osorio, Promise David, Saliba, Nelson.
Morocco: Bounou, Hakimi, Diop, Halhal, Mazraoui, Bouaddi, El Aynaoui, Diaz, Ounahi, El Khannous, Saibari. Subs: Mohamedi, Tagnaouti, Amrabat, Saadane, Talbi, Rahimi, El Ouahdi, El Mourabet, Yassine, Sbai, Riad, Belammari, El Kaabi, Amaimouni-Echghouyab, Saleh-Eddine.
Referee: Michael Oliver (England)
The co-hosts now playing away from home kick off the last 16 against the African champions* (Cas permitting?). Join Scott Murray for the latest.
Here's today's Football Daily. By me, actually, and celebrating the world's new friends from Cape Verde.
News from Ireland, a corner of these isles that is for ever Cape Verde, where a homecoming reception for Pico Lopes has been called for.
Sinn Féin Councillor Ciarán Ó Meachair told RTE, the state broadcaster, that he has written to the Lord Mayor of Dublin seeking a homecoming for Lopes.
“The whole country has been behind Pico and his teammates,†he said. “Over the past few weeks, we have seen Pico put in exceptional performances as Cape Verde recorded historic results against Saudi Arabia, Uruguay and current European Champions Spain to reach the knockout stage and a game against defending World Champions Argentina, where they fought until the bitter end.
“Pico has inspired another generation of kids playing grassroots football in Dublin to dream to achieve bigger things.â€
Lopes was born in Crumlin, plays for Shamrock Rovers, and was recruited via LinkedIn, as the whole of Ireland now knows.
More transfer news: Al Ettifaq have pinned down centre-back Jack Hendry to a new two-year deal. It's reported Hendry has becomes the highest-paid member of Scotland's squad.
Some quotes from Nathan Aké as he leaves Manchester City. “It's been a privilege to represent Manchester City over the past six years and I'm so grateful to have been part of a special team. I've grown so much here, as a player and a person, and I'm thankful for the time I've had at the club.
“I'll always cherish the memories, particularly of winning the Treble, being part of all four Premier League titles in a side that made history and triumphing in the Carabao Cup and FA Cup in my final season at the club.
“While I'm moving on, I'm very proud of everything we've achieved together and City will always be special to me.â€
Transfer news: Aké leaves Man City for Fenerbahce

Will Unwin
Nathan Ake has joined Fenerbahce, for a fee of £7m with add-ons taking it up to £8.5m. Ake joined City in 2020 from Bournemouth, and won four Premier League titles and the 2023 Champions League.
Reader questions for Luis de la Fuente, the Spain coach?
Sid Lowe is due to interview the Spain coach, and he'd like your help. You, the reader, send in questions for him to ask? Email john.brewin@theguardian.com or post below the line.
Addendum: You now have a bit longer, as Sid and Luis de la Fuente will be speaking later than planned. Keep them coming.
Players at the World Cup are enduring a “growing pattern of abuse†that â includes racist and discriminatory attacks both online and in person, global players' union Fifpro said on Saturday as â they demanded urgent â action.
With the ​tournament entering the last 16, Fifpro called for collective action to protect players from increasing abuse linked to â media scrutiny and the fallout from matches as teams get eliminated.
“In recent weeks, players have faced abuse online and in â person, much of it racist and discriminatory,†FIFPRO said in a statement. “There has ​been intimidation and hostility beyond ‌the pitch. These incidents ‌are not isolated; they point to a systemic pattern that cannot remain an ‌accepted part of football or society.
“Players shoulder the expectations of a nation, but this must never come at the cost of their safety, dignity or wellbeing, nor should abuse be dismissed as part of the game.â€
(Reuters)
An important piece from the excellent Nick Ames.
double quotation mark There are none of these bright lights and adornments in Port Arthur, 100 miles east of Houston. This settlement of 55,000 inhabitants is on its knees. A study in 2021 named it the poorest city in Texas, with a median household income of £27,700 and home value of £49,800. Almost 30% of its population live below the poverty line and then there is the dire public health outlook. Cancer diagnoses here consistently exceed the state average: figures vary but it is widely held that the cancer mortality rate for Port Arthur's predominantly black community is 40% higher than elsewhere in Texas. Childhood asthma rates are estimated to be almost double the national average. It is in the country's 90th percentile for heart disease; skin problems, benign or worse, are rife.
Here's how to get your fix of World Cup action.
We're up to match 90 of 108.
Good afternoon/good morning/good evening (?). The last 16 is here, already. The business end.
With just under three hours to go until Canada and Morocco get the last-16 matches underway, I'll hand you over to John Brewin. Enjoy.
Mark van Raaij has an idea about watching highlights packages (14:12). “Apart from not scrolling news on the phone, it seems you need to put the summary on full-screen, not touch anything so the completion bar disappears and not check the time – so you don't know how many minutes are left on the video.â€
Sounds good but I seem to have an internal clock that knows how long these packages last. I'll try it though. Thanks Mark!
Sorry for some confusion (utter incompetence) earlier over the last-16 fixtures. With England's game scheduled for early Monday, then moved back to late Sunday before returning to early Monday no wonder we're befuddled. It's all amended now.
Back in 2020 when sport stopped, Barney Ronay re-watched that classic clash between England and Argentina in the Azteca. Jog your memory with this highly-entertaining read from the archives.
“The Fifa archive film comes in vivid, slightly grainy square-screen. The pictures capture a world that was still pre-modern: cotton shirts, adverts for Camel cigarettes, skinny men in Union Jack shorts frazzling in the midday sun. The players' heads flash up on screen and you remember how young and handsome Maradona was in those pre-meltdown days. England are in white shirts and light blue shorts.
The names of the starting XI are: Pete, Gary, Kenny, Terry, Terry, Trevor, Glenn, Pete, Steve, Pete, Gary. Little wonder that in this company being called “Glenn†could mark you out as a bit of a maverick.â€
A quick look at the last-16 fixtures. All times BST:
Saturday, 4 July
18:00 Canada v Morocco
22:00 Paraguay v France
Sunday, 5 July
21:00 Brazil v Norway
Monday, 6 July
01:00 Mexico v England
20:00 Portugal v Spain
Tuesday, 7 July
01:00 USA v Belgium
17:00 Argentina v Egypt
21:00 Switzerland v Colombia
If all those matches go to form (ELO Ratings), we get Morocco, France, Brazil, England, Spain, Belgium, Argentina and Colombia in the last eight.
If those ratings keep playing out, we get a quarter-final line-up of:
France v Morocco
Spain v Belgium
Brazil v England
Argentina v Colombia
And, with England ranked 4th to Brazil's 5th we'd get these semi-finals:
France v Spain
Argentina v England
You can play around with the permutations below.
Fancy some more Cape Verde content? This is a great read from Mart ten Have in the Netherlands. Rotterdam is home to 25,000 Cape Verdeans and 1,600 of them gathered in a beer garden to watch the unforgettable game against Argentina.
Jordan Pickford should be careful what he eats and drinks between now and kick-off against Mexico. A new Audible podcast, ‘Foul Play', explores the mystery of how England goalkeeper Gordon Banks fell ill ahead of the 1970 quarter-final defeat to Germany in Mexico.
“It was a story that sounded too fantastical to be true. When Ed Jervis approached journalist Gabriel Gatehouse at a podcast festival more than three years ago, it was to tell him about his grandfather, England's legendary 1966 World Cup-winning goalkeeper Gordon Banks, and how he went down with a mysterious illness in the subsequent tournament, Mexico 1970.
“England lost the game that Banks missed – a crucial quarter-final tie against West Germany – despite taking a 2-0 lead. And Jervis told Gatehouse, a former international editor of Newsnight who had become something of an expert in US conspiracy culture with his podcast and book The Coming Storm, that he'd heard that his grandfather had actually been poisoned. By the CIA.â€
While Mark in Switzerland has got it sussed, I'll admit I've run into a bit of a problem with my own World Cup highlights viewing. In the group stage, watching the BBC/ITV 8-10 minute packages worked perfectly. Wake up, don't scroll on phone and watch the footage with no clue as to what happened. But in the knockout phase it's different. If, say, one side is leading 1-0 and I know there's only a minute left of highlights, it's obvious the other team hasn't equalised as there wouldn't be time to show the extra-time or penalties. So when Croatia ‘equalised' deep into injury-time against Portugal, I knew it would be ruled out by VAR.
Help needed. Any ideas?
Mark Bennett gets in touch: “So far I've been doing a pretty good job here in Switzerland, watching the games in the early evening and maybe the 22:00 KO here (21:00 in UK) and waking up to the Swiss TV Kompact show with a 30-minute round-up of all the night's action and no spoilers… that was until Switzerland played at 5.00am and I was awoken at 7.00am by horns blaring so I thought, ‘well the Nati won then'.. until my wife reminded me that the school kids do this on their way to the last day of school before summer break!â€
Another angle of Mo Salah's Panenka penalty in Egypt's shootout win over Australia. This is what he said about the calculated gamble:
“If somebody was going to do it, it would be me. I am more experienced than others, and I wanted to give them confidence. I decided [in the] last minute, I don't know if it's my last World Cup or not, but I had to do it.â€
Watching Mat Ryan hurl himself early left or right with Egypt's first two penalties may also have factored into Salah's thinking.

And then there were 16. It's fair to say that if you saw the remaining teams, it would be fairly easy to guess which part of the globe the tournament was taking place in. The Americas (CONMEBOL & CONCACAF) are definitely feeling some home continent advantage.
Here's a breakdown, by region, of last-16 teams at the 2018 (Russia), 2022 (Qatar) and 2026 (USA, Mexico, Canada) World Cups.
2026: Europe 7, Americas 7, Africa 2, Asia/Oceania 0
2022: Europe 8, Americas 3, Africa 2, Asia/Oceania 3
2018: Europe 10, Americas 5, Africa 0, Asia/Oceania 1
Forget Argentina ‘78, Kevin Dwyer takes us furher down memory lane: “I was very fortunate to be in Mexico for the 1970 World Cup (saving for four years on an appretice wage). I remember the hostility and noise-making outside the England team hotel was all part of the build up back then, without the availability of noise cancelling headphones.
“In 1970 I had just turned 21 and was very fit, but the effect of the sudden change in altitude was brutal. Climbing the steps of the Azteca up to our seats in the gods had me breathless. The altitude will play no small part, perhaps oxygen tanks instead of drinks bottles in the ‘hydration' breaks might be Tuchel's best strategy.â€
Rick Harris emails: “Paul Haynes (12:32) has made me think that for the minimal cost of hiring a coach and a few player lookalikes dressed appropriately the FA might be pulling off a massive decoy trick while the actual England squad has quietly crept into a different hotel elsewhere.â€
Funnily you should say that, Rick. At last year's Open Championship, I was speaking to a veteran Scottish journalist who was part of the press pack at the 1978 World Cup in Argentina. At the airport, the Scots journalists boarded a beautiful plush coach while Ally McLeod's squad were driven away in an absolute wreck of a thing. Why? The posh vehicle was far more likely to be hijacked.
In a random chat with Will, the name Herve Renard came up. And that got me thinking about that strange bunch of coaches who seem to get gainful employment at a World Cup – often with a completely different country – however badly they've done at a previous one.
Off the top of my head, this list includes Bora Milutinovic, Carlos Alberto Parreira and Claude Le Roy, with Herve Renard and Carlos Queiroz more recent entries. Renard jumped before he was pushed after Tunisia's abysmal showings in this World Cup but you know he'll be back. I'd venture that Julen Lopetegui will forge himself a nice multi-nation career at this level after leading Qatar to a 6-0 defeat against Canada.
Milutinovic and Le Roy remain personal favourites. Milutinovic has the look of a man who won fencing bronze at the 1976 Olympics and, as for Roy… not a conventionally good-looking man but an absolute player when it comes to attracting managerial work. After a couple of spells with Cameroon, this is Roy's CV since 2004. Remarkable.
2004–2006: DR Congo
2006–2008: Ghana
2008–2011: Oman
2011: Syria
2011–2013: DR Congo
2013–2015: Congo
2016–2021: Togo
2026–current day: Congo
The Congo double (twice!). And before all this, he was manager of Cambridge. Chapeau, monsieur!
Thanks Will. An extra-time and penalties of a shift that one.
Thank you very much for joining me. David Tindall will now take the reins.
Will Anthony Gordon be brought back into the starting lineup against Mexico? I would assume so after his impressive cameo instigated the turnaround against DR Congo.
Anthony Gordon
From the archive …
double quotation mark Mexico last hosted the World Cup in 1986, but the competition was almost cancelled several months before the start when an earthquake struck the capital, Mexico City, leaving at least 5,000 people dead, 30,000 homeless and much of the city flattened, in one of the worst earthquakes to hit the country.

Gareth Southgate is at Wimbledon today, enjoying that life is far less stressful during a tournament when you are not a manager.

Obviously, you can follow all the action here.
Paul Haynes gets in touch to say: “Just a thought, but perhaps England could've kept their arrival at the hotel more of a secret by not getting into a coach with a big England flag and the words England World Cup 2026 emblazoned on the side?â€
I would have helicoptered in personally.

Steve emails: “In answer to “how are you planning to watch†– with the kids at the utterly civilised time of 8am here in Indonesia. Nearly every game I watch during the season is late evening or more often middle of the night so it cracks me up to see complaining about 1am starts – I have an untold amount of 2.45 and 3.45am games during the season – so welcome to the club everyone!â€
Maybe we should all travel to Indonesia …
I imagine I will get a message from Mrs Koutsouvelis suggesting my daughter does not stay up because reception class in July is really important.
I've just asked my five-year-old daughter if she wants to watch the football at 1am BST on Monday or sleep. She says she wants to watch the Mexico v England. I cannot imagine it will go well.
Andrew Beasley
double quotation mark One element of the physicality of the game may fall in England's favour. Opta use two metrics to assess a team's style of play: direct speed and passes per sequence. The former is defined as “average speed of ball movement towards opponent goalline during sequence (in metres per second),†with a sequence being “passages of play that belong to one team and are ended by a defensive action, a stoppage in play or a shot.â€

Pablo Iglesias Maurer
double quotation mark Cape Verde's goalkeeper, Vozinha, was left crumpled on one knee, his World Cup dream slipping away. The 40-year-old had become a sensation after playing brilliantly to shut out the European champions, Spain, in Cape Verde's tournament opener. Vozinha, who plays his football in the Portuguese second division, made $53,000 last year. Messi made more than that for every five minutes he was on the field with Inter Miami last year.

Kevin Rawlinson
Wonderwall is a far superior song to Sweet Caroline, so I am all for it.
double quotation mark The three-way relationship between a travelling English support, the group of players they were cheering on and a three-decade-old hit by a Manchester band started with a DJ in Texas and a crucial win over a Croatian team that has stood between England's men's football team and glory before.
It is been an intriguing past 24 hours at the World Cup.
-
There was plenty of confusion of whether Mexico v England would be moved
-
Argentina broke Cape Verde hearts with a dramatic late win
-
Colombia sent Ghana packing
-
Klopp has opened talks about becoming the new Germany head coach
-
Penalty shootout misery for Australia as Egypt progress


Sid Lowe
Sid Lowe on Lamine Yamal. We may be hearing more about this young man.
double quotation mark Lamine Yamal is just 18, but he has said before that he has taken on “too much†responsibility for almost as long as he remembers. In a recent interview with El PaÃs, he said he first felt something like fame, exposure, when he was 13. At the start of this competition a video did the rounds of him walking round Walmart. Much was made of it, too much you might think and you wouldn't be wrong, but it wasn't meaningless. It mattered, and to him particularly: a rare opportunity to do something normal. Or not quite: the video appeared, which said something too.
Gilberto Mora has earned rave reviews in this World Cup and rightly so. The teenager looks a quality player, superb technique but I was speaking to someone who has followed him closely and is suspicious he will struggle physically against England. I reckon he will embrace the challenge.
Gilberto Mora
Alex Oxlade-Chamberlain has signed a new one-year contract to stay at Celtic.
The former Arsenal and Liverpool midfielder, capped 35 times by England, joined on a short-term deal in February after being released by Besiktas last summer, impressing in a Celtic shirt as he helped them to a league and cup double.
Oxlade-Chamberlain, 32, made 12 appearances, scoring two goals including a match-winning strike on debut against Livingston.
“I'm delighted to be staying at Celtic for another year,†Oxlade-Chamberlain said.
“It was an incredible time last season and to be part of that success in winning the league and Scottish Cup was so special.
“I'm really excited to be back and I'm looking forward to meeting up with the boys and getting to work ahead of what will hopefully be another successful season.†PA Media

Jacob Steinberg
Jacob Steinberg has some advice for Tuchel, too.
double quotation mark The answer is using the tactic that has so often disrupted Tuchel's England: stifle Mexico with the dreaded low block. The worst way to approach this game would be allowing it to become chaotic. England cannot give Mexico space to run in behind. Mexico have pace on the flanks and would love to play against a high line.
From stopping Mora to keeping the home crowd quiet, Nick Ames tells the England team what they need to do to beat Mexico.
Lars Sivertsen, meanwhile, talks of Norway's new golden generation and the hope they have brought to the nation.
double quotation mark Norway's first golden generation qualified for two World Cups, soared to second place in the Fifa rankings, beat the likes of England, Italy, Netherlands and Brazil, but never won a knockout game at a major tournament. And they exited both 1994 and 1998 World Cups with a sense of regret and unfulfilled potential. The current players know this story well. Three of them have fathers who played at the World Cup in '94. The current manager, StÃ¥le Solbakken, knows it intimately. He played just over an hour in that defeat by Italy. “Historically in tournaments, Norway have played well in qualifying and then performed worse at the World Cup,†Solbakken mused in a Netflix documentary released before this tournament. “Now we have to see if we can raise our gameâ€.






