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World Cup 2026 Australia thread

Segecic now injured with what could be a fairly serious injury after limping off in Portsmouth's game against Coventry City but best case scenario is he only misses a couple weeks.
 
(dates in US)

  • Turkey (assuming they win their playoff) in Vancouver on Sat 13 June
  • USA in Seattle on Fri 19 June.
  • Paraguay in San Francisco on Thurs 25 Jun

Assuming the seeds win all their groups in this:
  • Top the group, and we play B, E, F, I, J 3rd place (depending which top 8 they are) in San Francisco on July 1
  • Finish second in the group, and we play the runner up of Group G (Belgium, Egypt, Iran, New Zealand) in Dallas on June 30
  • Finish third in the group, and we play either (assuming the top seeds win their group): Germany in Boston on June 29, France in New York on June 30, or Portugal in Kansas City on July 3
 
My brain was so wired to the east coast that I hadn't even considered the west. Games on Saturday, Friday and Thursday.
 
I am expecting kick off times to be 2am, 5am, 8am, 11am for Australia, so this converts to group games on a Sunday morning, Saturday morning, and Friday morning for us.

round of 32 could literally be any day of the week with that spread. (Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday or Saturday morning)
 
Seattle, Philadelphia, Atlanta and Vancouver possible options for Round of 16 match should we get that far
 
Some excellent tourism destinations for Australia too. Could road trip it all.
 
My heart just sank. Tiebreaker is H2H.... FFS.

Is there some maths that tournaments affording 3rd placed teams a spot in the knock outs is fairer using H2H?

I just hate is so much as a lucky win is awarded more than the need to score more in certain cases.
 
Assuming all groups finish as seeded:

Round of 32: Iran
Round of 16: Argentina

Then, if we miracle run to the final (won’t happen, but worth mentioning), and still assuming all seeds win otherwise:

Quarter Final: Portugal (or Canada)
Semi Final: Mexico/England/Brazil
Final: USA/Germany/Netherlands/Belgium/Franxe/Spain
 
Assuming all groups finish as seeded:

Round of 32: Iran
Round of 16: Argentina

Then, if we miracle run to the final (won’t happen, but worth mentioning), and still assuming all seeds win otherwise:

Quarter Final: Portugal (or Canada)
Semi Final: Mexico/England/Brazil
Final: USA/Germany/Netherlands/Belgium/Franxe/Spain
Don't you dare even calculate THAT R32 being possible. Christ!

English press already plotting and their path looks really tough and they're good for a bad day.
 
My heart just sank. Tiebreaker is H2H.... FFS.

Is there some maths that tournaments affording 3rd placed teams a spot in the knock outs is fairer using H2H?

I just hate is so much as a lucky win is awarded more than the need to score more in certain cases.
Decided to do a good ol’ ChatGPT question for that:


1. To reward direct performance against the tied team(s)

Head-to-head is seen as a fairer indicator of which team was better in the actual match(es) between the tied sides.
  • If Team A beats Team B but both finish on equal points, many organisers see it as more logical that the team that won the matchup should rank higher.
  • Goal difference can be inflated by big wins against weak teams—head-to-head cannot.
This aligns with how club competitions like UEFA Champions League group stages have long used head-to-head.


2. To reduce the influence of “dead-rubber” scorelines

When tournaments used overall goal difference as the first tiebreaker, teams sometimes ran up huge margins late in the group stage (often against eliminated opponents).
  • This created sporting imbalance.
  • Groups where the weakest team was scheduled last created an unfair advantage for the teams who played them later.
Head-to-head reduces the incentive to chase unnecessary goals.

3. To discourage anti-competitive behaviour (e.g., collusive draws)

Past tournaments had infamous situations where two teams could play for a specific score to eliminate others, because goal difference gave them too much information to manipulate.

Head-to-head reduces these opportunities because:
  • Teams can’t as easily engineer a qualification scenario without considering how other tied teams performed against each other.
  • It creates more complex and less predictable permutations.
4. It helps tournaments with 24-team formats and uneven strengths

Many modern competitions (EUROs 2016+, AFCON expansions) have groups with more variation in team quality.
  • Goal difference favours teams who hammer the weakest opponent.
  • Head-to-head makes the middle of the group—the actual decisive matches—more important.
This is especially useful in 3-team mini-tables (common after multi-team ties).

5. Consistency with UEFA club competitions

UEFA normalised the head-to-head priority in their club competitions decades earlier.

When EURO 2016 expanded and rewrote its format, UEFA aligned the national-team rules with the club rules.

This harmonisation makes tournament rules easier for coaches and analysts.

6. Head-to-head solves multi-team ties more cleanly

When three or more teams tie on points, goal difference across all matches can still be skewed by results involving the bottom team.

Head-to-head mini-tables:
  • Look only at the matches between the tied teams
  • Often separate them more logically
  • Reduce randomness introduced by mismatched opponents
7. Some confederations simply updated their philosophy

CAF, UEFA, AFC, CONCACAF—most have modernised their competition regulations to reflect the current philosophy of match-based fairness over total-group arithmetic.

FIFA World Cup remains one of the few big tournaments still using overall goal difference first, mainly due to tradition and because match manipulation is harder with simultaneous kickoffs.

In short
International tournaments now use head-to-head first because it:
  • Rewards results between the tied teams
  • Reduces artificial goal-chasing
  • Discourages collusion
  • Handles multi-team ties better
  • Aligns with modern competition design philosophy
 
Don't you dare even calculate THAT R32 being possible. Christ!

English press already plotting and their path looks really tough and they're good for a bad day.
I guess - statistically - it’s the most likely outcome! That fuckwit doesn’t have a passport I hope?
 
I definitely see how H2H assists in the presence of much weaker teams. We may see blow-outs but the teams in question drew then the other criteria applies. I just hate it if everyone beats each other then it becomes really confusing.
 
Tony Popovic scored his final goal in his final minute in his final game for the #Socceroos against Paraguay in 2006 💪

20 years later, he and the CommBank Socceroos will face the South American side again at the #FIFAWorldCup 2026 🇵🇾
 
Tony Popovic scored his final goal in his final minute in his final game for the #Socceroos against Paraguay in 2006 💪

20 years later, he and the CommBank Socceroos will face the South American side again at the #FIFAWorldCup 2026 🇵🇾
Yep, I was at that game at Lang Park (Suncorp)
 
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