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Deadspin | Ghana hires Carlos Queiroz as head coach ahead of World Cup  Iran coach Carlos Queiroz reacts during a World Cup match against the United States in Doha, Qatar in 2022. Credit: Reuters/Kai Pfaffenbach   Ghana completed its shakeup ahead of this summer’s World Cup by naming Carlos Queiroz as head coach.  Queiroz, 73, has World Cup head coach experience with Iran in 2014, 2018 and 2022, as well as with Portugal in 2010. The Portugal native led his home country to the Round of 16 in the 2010 event at South Africa, where it lost to Spain.  Ghana fired former head coach Otto Addo late last month in advance of the country’s opening game of the World Cup against Panama on June 17 at Toronto. Ghana also will face England and Croatia in Group L play.  At the time of Addo’s dismissal, Ghana was on a five-game losing streak that included a recent 5-1 loss to Austria and a 2-1 loss to Germany. While Ghana did qualify for the World Cup, it did not qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations this upcoming winter.   Before the World Cup begins, Ghana will have a pair of friendlies under Queiroz at Mexico on May 22 and at Wales on June 2.  A coach for nearly four decades, Queiroz also had head coaching stops with the national teams of the United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Colombia, Egypt and Qatar. At the club level, he was head coach at Sporting CP in Portugal, the New York/New Jersey Metrostars in MLS and Real Madrid in Spain.  Queiroz was the assistant manager under Alex Ferguson for two different stints at Manchester United of the English Premier League from 2002-2003 and again from 2004-2008.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Ghana #hires #Carlos #Queiroz #coach #ahead #World #Cup

Deadspin | Ghana hires Carlos Queiroz as head coach ahead of World Cup
Deadspin | Ghana hires Carlos Queiroz as head coach ahead of World Cup  Iran coach Carlos Queiroz reacts during a World Cup match against the United States in Doha, Qatar in 2022. Credit: Reuters/Kai Pfaffenbach   Ghana completed its shakeup ahead of this summer’s World Cup by naming Carlos Queiroz as head coach.  Queiroz, 73, has World Cup head coach experience with Iran in 2014, 2018 and 2022, as well as with Portugal in 2010. The Portugal native led his home country to the Round of 16 in the 2010 event at South Africa, where it lost to Spain.  Ghana fired former head coach Otto Addo late last month in advance of the country’s opening game of the World Cup against Panama on June 17 at Toronto. Ghana also will face England and Croatia in Group L play.  At the time of Addo’s dismissal, Ghana was on a five-game losing streak that included a recent 5-1 loss to Austria and a 2-1 loss to Germany. While Ghana did qualify for the World Cup, it did not qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations this upcoming winter.   Before the World Cup begins, Ghana will have a pair of friendlies under Queiroz at Mexico on May 22 and at Wales on June 2.  A coach for nearly four decades, Queiroz also had head coaching stops with the national teams of the United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Colombia, Egypt and Qatar. At the club level, he was head coach at Sporting CP in Portugal, the New York/New Jersey Metrostars in MLS and Real Madrid in Spain.  Queiroz was the assistant manager under Alex Ferguson for two different stints at Manchester United of the English Premier League from 2002-2003 and again from 2004-2008.  –Field Level Media    #Deadspin #Ghana #hires #Carlos #Queiroz #coach #ahead #World #CupIran coach Carlos Queiroz reacts during a World Cup match against the United States in Doha, Qatar in 2022. Credit: Reuters/Kai Pfaffenbach

Ghana completed its shakeup ahead of this summer’s World Cup by naming Carlos Queiroz as head coach.

Queiroz, 73, has World Cup head coach experience with Iran in 2014, 2018 and 2022, as well as with Portugal in 2010. The Portugal native led his home country to the Round of 16 in the 2010 event at South Africa, where it lost to Spain.

Ghana fired former head coach Otto Addo late last month in advance of the country’s opening game of the World Cup against Panama on June 17 at Toronto. Ghana also will face England and Croatia in Group L play.


At the time of Addo’s dismissal, Ghana was on a five-game losing streak that included a recent 5-1 loss to Austria and a 2-1 loss to Germany. While Ghana did qualify for the World Cup, it did not qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations this upcoming winter.

Before the World Cup begins, Ghana will have a pair of friendlies under Queiroz at Mexico on May 22 and at Wales on June 2.

A coach for nearly four decades, Queiroz also had head coaching stops with the national teams of the United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Colombia, Egypt and Qatar. At the club level, he was head coach at Sporting CP in Portugal, the New York/New Jersey Metrostars in MLS and Real Madrid in Spain.

Queiroz was the assistant manager under Alex Ferguson for two different stints at Manchester United of the English Premier League from 2002-2003 and again from 2004-2008.


–Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Ghana #hires #Carlos #Queiroz #coach #ahead #World #Cup

Iran coach Carlos Queiroz reacts during a World Cup match against the United States in Doha, Qatar in 2022. Credit: Reuters/Kai Pfaffenbach

Ghana completed its shakeup ahead of this summer’s World Cup by naming Carlos Queiroz as head coach.

Queiroz, 73, has World Cup head coach experience with Iran in 2014, 2018 and 2022, as well as with Portugal in 2010. The Portugal native led his home country to the Round of 16 in the 2010 event at South Africa, where it lost to Spain.

Ghana fired former head coach Otto Addo late last month in advance of the country’s opening game of the World Cup against Panama on June 17 at Toronto. Ghana also will face England and Croatia in Group L play.

At the time of Addo’s dismissal, Ghana was on a five-game losing streak that included a recent 5-1 loss to Austria and a 2-1 loss to Germany. While Ghana did qualify for the World Cup, it did not qualify for the Africa Cup of Nations this upcoming winter.

Before the World Cup begins, Ghana will have a pair of friendlies under Queiroz at Mexico on May 22 and at Wales on June 2.

A coach for nearly four decades, Queiroz also had head coaching stops with the national teams of the United Arab Emirates, South Africa, Colombia, Egypt and Qatar. At the club level, he was head coach at Sporting CP in Portugal, the New York/New Jersey Metrostars in MLS and Real Madrid in Spain.

Queiroz was the assistant manager under Alex Ferguson for two different stints at Manchester United of the English Premier League from 2002-2003 and again from 2004-2008.

–Field Level Media

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#Deadspin #Ghana #hires #Carlos #Queiroz #coach #ahead #World #Cup

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Deadspin | Opposite trajectories landed Magic, Sixers in faceoff for No. 7 seed <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/27970827.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/27970827.jpg" alt="NBA: Philadelphia 76ers at Orlando Magic" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Jan 9, 2026; Orlando, Florida, USA; Orlando Magic center Wendell Carter Jr. (34) drives to the basket past Philadelphia 76ers guard Tyrese Maxey (0) in the fourth quarter at Kia Center. Mandatory Credit: Nathan Ray Seebeck-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>The Philadelphia 76ers and Orlando Magic took different paths to the same record this season.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>On Wednesday night, they’ll be occupied with the same high-stakes task when the 76ers host the Magic in an Eastern Conference play-in tournament game.</p> </section><section id="section-3"> <p>Both teams finished 45-37 during the regular season, but Philadelphia finished in seventh place in the East and earned home-court advantage Wednesday by virtue of winning two of three games against Orlando.</p> </section><section id="section-4"> <p>The winner of Wednesday’s game advances to the main bracket as the seventh seed and will play a best-of-seven series against the second-seeded Boston Celtics.</p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>The loser will play again Friday night, hosting the winner of Tuesday night’s game between the ninth-place Charlotte Hornets and the 10th-place Miami Heat for the right to earn the eighth seed and a first-round date with the top-seeded Detroit Pistons.</p> </section><section id="section-6"> <p>Orlando appeared likely to secure the home-court advantage when it entered Sunday’s regular-season finale with a one-game lead over the 76ers. But the Magic’s comeback bid came up short in a 113-108 loss to the Celtics, who sat their top seven scorers, while Philadelphia beat the Milwaukee Bucks 126-106.</p> </section><section id="section-7"> <p>The surprise loss continued a discouraging trend of inconsistency for the Magic. They were expected to emerge as an Eastern Conference contender after reaching the playoffs for a second straight season last year despite the quartet of Paolo Banchero, Franz Wagner, Jalen Suggs and Moritz Wagner combining to play just 171 games.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-8"> <p>While Franz Wagner (high ankle sprain) and Moritz Wagner (recovery from a torn ACL) combined to play only 70 games this season, the trio of Banchero, Suggs and offseason acquisition Desmond Bane missed a total of just 35.</p> </section> <section id="section-9"> <p>Yet Orlando won more than three straight games just twice this year and lost six straight immediately after a season-long seven-game winning streak from March 3-14. The Magic had a five-game winning streak snapped Sunday.</p> </section><section id="section-10"> <p>“I think collectively, we just have to have more urgency,” Banchero said Sunday. “We can’t expect to win just because (opponents’) guys are out.”</p> </section><section id="section-11"> <p>Expectations were lower for the 76ers, who went 24-58 last year and entered this season still built around the aging duo of Joel Embiid and Paul George.</p> </section><section id="section-12"> <p>Embiid, 32, lost 44 games due to a variety of injuries and illnesses and will miss Wednesday’s tilt following an emergency appendectomy last week. George, 35, was limited to 37 games following left knee surgery last offseason and a 25-game drug suspension.</p> </section><section id="section-13"> <p>But the 76ers, keyed by emerging star point guard Tyrese Maxey, 25, and 20-year-old rookie VJ Edgecombe, won their first four games of the season and never slipped back to .500. Maxey averaged 28.3 points per game while playing a league-high 38 minutes per contest. Edgecombe averaged 16.0 points and 5.6 rebounds over a team-high 75 games.</p> </section><section id="section-14"> <p>In addition, George has averaged 21.0 points per game since returning March 25.</p> </section><section id="section-15"> <p>“We’ve got a lot of ceiling to go yet,” 76ers head coach Nick Nurse said. “So hopefully, we get to play a bunch of games and keep improving.”</p> </section><br/><section id="section-16"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section> </div> #Deadspin #trajectories #landed #Magic #Sixers #faceoff #seed

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Deadspin | Mariners place Rob Refsnyder on paternity list, promote Patrick Wisdom <div id=""><section id="0" class=" w-full"><div class="xl:container mx-0 !px-4 py-0 pb-4 !mx-0 !px-0"><img src="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28462694.jpg" srcset="https://images.deadspin.com/tr:w-900/28462694.jpg" alt="MLB: Spring Training-Seattle Mariners at Kansas City Royals" class="w-full" fetchpriority="high" loading="eager"/><span class="text-0.8 leading-tight">Feb 25, 2026; Surprise, Arizona, USA; Seattle Mariners outfielder Rob Refsnyder against the Kansas City Royals during a spring training game at Surprise Stadium. Mandatory Credit: Mark J. Rebilas-Imagn Images<!-- --> <!-- --> </span></div></section><section id="section-1"> <p>The Seattle Mariners placed infielder/outfielder Rob Refsnyder on the paternity list Tuesday and selected the contract of infielder Patrick Wisdom from Triple-A Tacoma.</p> </section><section id="section-2"> <p>The Mariners designated right-hander Blas Castano for assignment to create a spot on the 40-man roster for Wisdom.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-3"> <p>Refsnyder, 35, signed a one-year contract with Seattle in December. He is hitless in eight games and 16 at-bats this season, and is a career .252 hitter with 33 homers and 154 RBIs in 549 games with the New York Yankees (2015-17), Toronto Blue Jays (2017), Tampa Bay Rays (2018), Texas Rangers (2020), Minnesota Twins (2021), Boston Red Sox (2022-25) and Mariners.</p> </section> <section id="section-4"> <p>Wisdom, 34, signed a minor league deal with Seattle in January after he was in the Chicago Cubs’ organization since 2020. He leads all minor leaguers with nine home runs in 15 games at Tacoma. At the major league level, he has a .209 average, 88 homers and 207 RBIs in 455 games with the St. Louis Cardinals (2018), Rangers (2019) and Cubs.</p> </section><section id="section-5"> <p>Castano, 27, has made just one career major league appearance, allowing three runs on four hits over three innings in a 9-0 loss to the Washington Nationals on May 28, 2025.</p> </section><br/><section id="section-6"> <p>–Field Level Media</p> </section> </div> #Deadspin #Mariners #place #Rob #Refsnyder #paternity #list #promote #Patrick #Wisdom

The Bermuda Triangle, the Loch Ness Monster, and the MH370 plane that disappeared without a trace. These are some of mankind’s greatest mysteries.

On Saturday, the FIFA World Cup 2026 made a worthy contribution to this list — the mystery of how Paraguay ended its Round of 16 defeat to France without being shown a yellow card.

The South American side tried everything it could to get booked. There were arms swung at French faces, elbows thrust into French throats and studs stamped on French shins and boots.

Paraguay’s efforts weren’t limited to physical outbursts. There were also blatant play-acting seeking fouls and constant verbal efforts to rile up the French players. The icing on the cake came from defender Gustavo Velázquez, who attempted to not-so-discreetly scuff up the penalty spot to put off Kylian Mbappe right before the forward fired in the match-winning goal.

Despite all this, the on-field referee Ilgiz Tantashev refused to caution the Paraguayans, holding onto his cards like prized possessions.

Consumed by its intent to play the disruptor, Paraguay displayed no willingness to hold onto the ball. Sitting deep in its territory with a 5-4-1 low block, the side’s forays into the opposition half were largely limited to hopeful long balls and isolated dribbles from forward Julia Enciso.

Paraguay’s possession was clocked at just 24.1%, while its pass completion rate was an abysmal 54.1% – the second-lowest by a team in a World Cup game since 1966. Not surprisingly, the side managed just five shots, with only one on target.

What Paraguay succeeded in doing was dragging the game down to a scrapfest and frustrating France. With no space to operate in and around the attacking third, the two-time World Champion was forced to fire in speculative crosses and attempt shots from distance.

It didn’t take too long for the French exasperation to spill out. Mbappe was seen engaging in multiple duels – verbal and non-verbal – with Paraguayan players. The usually unflappable Michael Olise was baited into a scuffle, which ended with the French attacker being shown a yellow card.

Playing disruptor: Mystery of Paraguay’s World Cup defeat to France without getting booked  The Bermuda Triangle, the Loch Ness Monster, and the MH370 plane that disappeared without a trace. These are some of mankind’s greatest mysteries.On Saturday, the FIFA World Cup 2026 made a worthy contribution to this list — the mystery of how Paraguay ended its Round of 16 defeat to France without being shown a yellow card.The South American side tried everything it could to get booked. There were arms swung at French faces, elbows thrust into French throats and studs stamped on French shins and boots.Paraguay’s efforts weren’t limited to physical outbursts. There were also blatant play-acting seeking fouls and constant verbal efforts to rile up the French players. The icing on the cake came from defender Gustavo Velázquez, who attempted to not-so-discreetly scuff up the penalty spot to put off Kylian Mbappe right before the forward fired in the match-winning goal.Despite all this, the on-field referee Ilgiz Tantashev refused to caution the Paraguayans, holding onto his cards like prized possessions.Consumed by its intent to play the disruptor, Paraguay displayed no willingness to hold onto the ball. Sitting deep in its territory with a 5-4-1 low block, the side’s forays into the opposition half were largely limited to hopeful long balls and isolated dribbles from forward Julia Enciso.Paraguay’s possession was clocked at just 24.1%, while its pass completion rate was an abysmal 54.1% – the second-lowest by a team in a World Cup game since 1966. Not surprisingly, the side managed just five shots, with only one on target.What Paraguay succeeded in doing was dragging the game down to a scrapfest and frustrating France. With no space to operate in and around the attacking third, the two-time World Champion was forced to fire in speculative crosses and attempt shots from distance.It didn’t take too long for the French exasperation to spill out. Mbappe was seen engaging in multiple duels – verbal and non-verbal – with Paraguayan players. The usually unflappable Michael Olise was baited into a scuffle, which ended with the French attacker being shown a yellow card. It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                            

                            It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                                                    It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.But France – which had earlier taken the tournament by storm with its expansive, eye-catching football – showed its willingness to get its hands dirty.France responded to Paraguay’s challenge with its own tough tackles, with Bradley Barcola and Manu Koné getting booked for two of them. There were multiple multi-player tussles between the two sides which unsettled the game’s rhythm. In the end, France held onto a slender win, as it booked a quarterfinal clash against Morocco.“We know how to play ugly football,” said Mbappe in a post-match interview.“They [Paraguay] thought we’d show up in tuxedos, but we were ready. Even at that game, we were better than them,” he added.Mbappe’s emotions were on ample display at the full-time whistle. The talismanic forward walked right past a handshake offer from Paraguayan keeper Orlando Gill to celebrate joyously, whipping up the fervour among the French supporters in the stadium.To his credit, Mbappe refused to belittle Paraguay’s approach.“That’s their style of football – there’s no right or wrong way to play the game. They tried to beat us that way, but we won,” said Mbappe.Paraguay stuck to its own method, the same one which had garnered it a shock win over Germany in the Round of 32. Ultimately, the Paraguayan way failed as France demonstrated its willingness to get its hands dirty.Published on Jul 05, 2026  #Playing #disruptor #Mystery #Paraguays #World #Cup #defeat #France #booked

It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic. | Photo Credit: REUTERS

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It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic. | Photo Credit: REUTERS

It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.

But France – which had earlier taken the tournament by storm with its expansive, eye-catching football – showed its willingness to get its hands dirty.

France responded to Paraguay’s challenge with its own tough tackles, with Bradley Barcola and Manu Koné getting booked for two of them. There were multiple multi-player tussles between the two sides which unsettled the game’s rhythm. In the end, France held onto a slender win, as it booked a quarterfinal clash against Morocco.

“We know how to play ugly football,” said Mbappe in a post-match interview.

“They [Paraguay] thought we’d show up in tuxedos, but we were ready. Even at that game, we were better than them,” he added.

Mbappe’s emotions were on ample display at the full-time whistle. The talismanic forward walked right past a handshake offer from Paraguayan keeper Orlando Gill to celebrate joyously, whipping up the fervour among the French supporters in the stadium.

To his credit, Mbappe refused to belittle Paraguay’s approach.

“That’s their style of football – there’s no right or wrong way to play the game. They tried to beat us that way, but we won,” said Mbappe.

Paraguay stuck to its own method, the same one which had garnered it a shock win over Germany in the Round of 32. Ultimately, the Paraguayan way failed as France demonstrated its willingness to get its hands dirty.

Published on Jul 05, 2026

#Playing #disruptor #Mystery #Paraguays #World #Cup #defeat #France #booked">Playing disruptor: Mystery of Paraguay’s World Cup defeat to France without getting booked  The Bermuda Triangle, the Loch Ness Monster, and the MH370 plane that disappeared without a trace. These are some of mankind’s greatest mysteries.On Saturday, the FIFA World Cup 2026 made a worthy contribution to this list — the mystery of how Paraguay ended its Round of 16 defeat to France without being shown a yellow card.The South American side tried everything it could to get booked. There were arms swung at French faces, elbows thrust into French throats and studs stamped on French shins and boots.Paraguay’s efforts weren’t limited to physical outbursts. There were also blatant play-acting seeking fouls and constant verbal efforts to rile up the French players. The icing on the cake came from defender Gustavo Velázquez, who attempted to not-so-discreetly scuff up the penalty spot to put off Kylian Mbappe right before the forward fired in the match-winning goal.Despite all this, the on-field referee Ilgiz Tantashev refused to caution the Paraguayans, holding onto his cards like prized possessions.Consumed by its intent to play the disruptor, Paraguay displayed no willingness to hold onto the ball. Sitting deep in its territory with a 5-4-1 low block, the side’s forays into the opposition half were largely limited to hopeful long balls and isolated dribbles from forward Julia Enciso.Paraguay’s possession was clocked at just 24.1%, while its pass completion rate was an abysmal 54.1% – the second-lowest by a team in a World Cup game since 1966. Not surprisingly, the side managed just five shots, with only one on target.What Paraguay succeeded in doing was dragging the game down to a scrapfest and frustrating France. With no space to operate in and around the attacking third, the two-time World Champion was forced to fire in speculative crosses and attempt shots from distance.It didn’t take too long for the French exasperation to spill out. Mbappe was seen engaging in multiple duels – verbal and non-verbal – with Paraguayan players. The usually unflappable Michael Olise was baited into a scuffle, which ended with the French attacker being shown a yellow card. It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                            

                            It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.
                                                            | Photo Credit: 
                                REUTERS
                                                    It was almost as if the Philadelphia heat – at kick-off, the mercury stood at 38.3 Celsius – had tampered with the player’s logic.But France – which had earlier taken the tournament by storm with its expansive, eye-catching football – showed its willingness to get its hands dirty.France responded to Paraguay’s challenge with its own tough tackles, with Bradley Barcola and Manu Koné getting booked for two of them. There were multiple multi-player tussles between the two sides which unsettled the game’s rhythm. In the end, France held onto a slender win, as it booked a quarterfinal clash against Morocco.“We know how to play ugly football,” said Mbappe in a post-match interview.“They [Paraguay] thought we’d show up in tuxedos, but we were ready. Even at that game, we were better than them,” he added.Mbappe’s emotions were on ample display at the full-time whistle. The talismanic forward walked right past a handshake offer from Paraguayan keeper Orlando Gill to celebrate joyously, whipping up the fervour among the French supporters in the stadium.To his credit, Mbappe refused to belittle Paraguay’s approach.“That’s their style of football – there’s no right or wrong way to play the game. They tried to beat us that way, but we won,” said Mbappe.Paraguay stuck to its own method, the same one which had garnered it a shock win over Germany in the Round of 32. Ultimately, the Paraguayan way failed as France demonstrated its willingness to get its hands dirty.Published on Jul 05, 2026  #Playing #disruptor #Mystery #Paraguays #World #Cup #defeat #France #booked

Deadspin | Ticket prices plunge for U.S.-Belgium World Cup knockout match  United States fans celebrate outside Seattle Stadium on June 19, 2026.   SEATTLE — Ticket prices for the United States’ highly anticipated round of 16 game against Belgium on Monday plunged by more than 30% before rebounding slightly early Saturday evening.  The get-in price for the final 2026 World Cup match in Seattle hit nearly ,000 on June 1, according to ticket-tracking service TicketData.com. After dipping to as low as ,549 on Tuesday, the get-in price spiked to ,836 after the USMNT solidified their spot in the round of 16 with a 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina.   However, the get-in price has steadily declined in the days since. It dropped to ,423 on Saturday afternoon — a 32% decrease over the past three days — but the get-in price rebounded to ,635 at 6 p.m. ET.  That late boost pushed the US-Belgium game from the fourth-highest get-in price to the second-highest price among the eight round of 16 matches. Mexico’s game against England in Mexico City on Sunday sits at ,574.  ROUND OF 16 TICKET PRICES*  Mexico-England, 7/5 (Houston): ,574  USA-Belgium: 7/6 (Seattle): ,635  Argentina-Egypt: 7/7 (Atlanta): ,599  Brazil-Norway: 7/5 (New York): ,537   Portugal-Spain: 7/6 (Dallas): ,367  Switzerland-Colombia: 9 (Vancouver): 2  Paraguay-France: 7/4 (Philadelphia): 4  Canada-Morocco: 7/4 (Houston): 1  *TicketData.com as of 6 p.m. ET on July 4  The significant drop in the get-in price for the US-Belgium game is somewhat surprising considering the Red Devils’ base camp is located just 10 miles south of Seattle Stadium at the Sounders FC Performance Center. Monday will mark Belgium’s third match in Seattle following a 1-1 draw with Egypt in the group stage and a dramatic 3-2 comeback victory over Senegal in the round of 32.  Canada was the first team eliminated from the round of 16 with their 3-0 loss to Morocco on Saturday. The get-in price for that match dropped 14% from 8 over the final 72 hours.  –Derek Harper, Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Ticket #prices #plunge #U.S.Belgium #World #Cup #knockout #matchUnited States fans celebrate outside Seattle Stadium on June 19, 2026.

SEATTLE — Ticket prices for the United States’ highly anticipated round of 16 game against Belgium on Monday plunged by more than 30% before rebounding slightly early Saturday evening.

The get-in price for the final 2026 World Cup match in Seattle hit nearly $4,000 on June 1, according to ticket-tracking service TicketData.com. After dipping to as low as $1,549 on Tuesday, the get-in price spiked to $2,836 after the USMNT solidified their spot in the round of 16 with a 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina.

However, the get-in price has steadily declined in the days since. It dropped to $1,423 on Saturday afternoon — a 32% decrease over the past three days — but the get-in price rebounded to $1,635 at 6 p.m. ET.

That late boost pushed the US-Belgium game from the fourth-highest get-in price to the second-highest price among the eight round of 16 matches. Mexico’s game against England in Mexico City on Sunday sits at $3,574.

ROUND OF 16 TICKET PRICES*

Mexico-England, 7/5 (Houston): $3,574

USA-Belgium: 7/6 (Seattle): $1,635

Argentina-Egypt: 7/7 (Atlanta): $1,599


Brazil-Norway: 7/5 (New York): $1,537

Portugal-Spain: 7/6 (Dallas): $1,367

Switzerland-Colombia: $959 (Vancouver): $972

Paraguay-France: 7/4 (Philadelphia): $914

Canada-Morocco: 7/4 (Houston): $721

*TicketData.com as of 6 p.m. ET on July 4

The significant drop in the get-in price for the US-Belgium game is somewhat surprising considering the Red Devils’ base camp is located just 10 miles south of Seattle Stadium at the Sounders FC Performance Center. Monday will mark Belgium’s third match in Seattle following a 1-1 draw with Egypt in the group stage and a dramatic 3-2 comeback victory over Senegal in the round of 32.

Canada was the first team eliminated from the round of 16 with their 3-0 loss to Morocco on Saturday. The get-in price for that match dropped 14% from $838 over the final 72 hours.

–Derek Harper, Field Level Media

#Deadspin #Ticket #prices #plunge #U.S.Belgium #World #Cup #knockout #match">Deadspin | Ticket prices plunge for U.S.-Belgium World Cup knockout match  United States fans celebrate outside Seattle Stadium on June 19, 2026.   SEATTLE — Ticket prices for the United States’ highly anticipated round of 16 game against Belgium on Monday plunged by more than 30% before rebounding slightly early Saturday evening.  The get-in price for the final 2026 World Cup match in Seattle hit nearly ,000 on June 1, according to ticket-tracking service TicketData.com. After dipping to as low as ,549 on Tuesday, the get-in price spiked to ,836 after the USMNT solidified their spot in the round of 16 with a 2-0 win over Bosnia and Herzegovina.   However, the get-in price has steadily declined in the days since. It dropped to ,423 on Saturday afternoon — a 32% decrease over the past three days — but the get-in price rebounded to ,635 at 6 p.m. ET.  That late boost pushed the US-Belgium game from the fourth-highest get-in price to the second-highest price among the eight round of 16 matches. Mexico’s game against England in Mexico City on Sunday sits at ,574.  ROUND OF 16 TICKET PRICES*  Mexico-England, 7/5 (Houston): ,574  USA-Belgium: 7/6 (Seattle): ,635  Argentina-Egypt: 7/7 (Atlanta): ,599  Brazil-Norway: 7/5 (New York): ,537   Portugal-Spain: 7/6 (Dallas): ,367  Switzerland-Colombia: 9 (Vancouver): 2  Paraguay-France: 7/4 (Philadelphia): 4  Canada-Morocco: 7/4 (Houston): 1  *TicketData.com as of 6 p.m. ET on July 4  The significant drop in the get-in price for the US-Belgium game is somewhat surprising considering the Red Devils’ base camp is located just 10 miles south of Seattle Stadium at the Sounders FC Performance Center. Monday will mark Belgium’s third match in Seattle following a 1-1 draw with Egypt in the group stage and a dramatic 3-2 comeback victory over Senegal in the round of 32.  Canada was the first team eliminated from the round of 16 with their 3-0 loss to Morocco on Saturday. The get-in price for that match dropped 14% from 8 over the final 72 hours.  –Derek Harper, Field Level Media   #Deadspin #Ticket #prices #plunge #U.S.Belgium #World #Cup #knockout #match

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