For a country that had not seen the World Cup in 28 years, Norway has arrived in the quarterfinals as if it has always belonged here. Brazil was the latest to discover how thin the margin is when Erling Haaland is on the pitch.

    Two goals in the final 11 minutes in New Jersey – one a towering header, the other a finish of startling violence –carried Norway into the quarterfinals for the first time in its history.

    Haaland has seven goals from just 12 shots on target, with only six efforts off target all tournament. His 4.32 non-penalty expected goals are the best figure at this World Cup, helping explain why Norway leads the field in xG per shot. Ståle Solbakken’s side may not create as much as England, but the chances it does fashion tend to be clean, central and devastatingly suited to the most clinical finisher in the game.

    Norway's midfield pair of Martin Odegaard, left, and Sander Berge will be keen to have a say in the clash against England. | Photo Credit: REUTERS

    Norway’s route to Haaland usually runs through midfield, where Martin Ødegaard remains the creative hinge, Sander Berge the calm distributor, and the pair have exchanged a team-high 128 passes so far. England will know that cutting that axis is as important as stopping Haaland himself. If Ødegaard is allowed to turn or Berge to punch passes through the first line of pressure, Norway can turn defence into danger in seconds.

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    England, though, comes into Miami with its own conviction. Harry Kane has six goals, though two have come from the penalty spot, and Jude Bellingham’s four goals have made him the side’s second great source of menace. Reduced to 10 men after Jarell Quansah’s red card against Mexico, Thomas Tuchel’s side held firm through the final half-hour in a stadium and atmosphere that seemed designed to swallow them.

    England head coach Thomas Tuchel is left scrambling for defensive reinforcements due to injuries and suspension. | Photo Credit: AP

    Quansah’s suspension and Marc Guehi’s hamstring issue, however, leave Thomas Tuchel with questions at the back, particularly on the right side, where Norway will surely look to probe. Reece James may yet return, but England’s defensive certainty has been shaken at exactly the moment it faces the world’s hottest striker.

    England may have the broader squad and the deeper tournament memory, but Norway has Haaland, and right now, that can feel like a force large enough to bend the game.

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    Published on Jul 10, 2026

    Published on 10 July 2026 by sportstar

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