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Colombia can soften their knockout route in Miami

World Cup 2026 The Colombia World Cup knockout campaign is up and running, secured with a game to spare, and the shape of their draw now hinges on one match in Miami. For a reader following from abroad, the simple version is this. Colombia, a South American side ranked just outside the world’s top ten, are safely into the last thirty-two of football’s biggest tournament. They got there the hard way, grinding out results rather than romping through. The interesting question now is not whether

they advance, but who they meet when they do. How the Colombia World Cup knockout place was won According to FIFA’s official standings, Colombia sit top of Group K on six points, ahead of Portugal on goal difference, with both sides already qualified. Their opening win was a lively one, beating tournament debutants Uzbekistan three to one at the Azteca in Mexico City. The second was a far tighter affair, a single goal seeing off a stubborn Democratic Republic of Congo. That second match told

a story the scoreline hid. Colombia battered their opponents, had a shot count in the twenties, and saw two efforts from star winger Luis Díaz ruled out, one for offside and one for a foul in the build-up. For long stretches it looked as though Colombia might pay for their wastefulness. In the end the breakthrough came late, and from an unexpected source. The defender carrying the scoring load Both of Colombia’s decisive goals have come from the same man, and he is not a

forward. Daniel Muñoz is a right-back who plays his club football for Crystal Palace in England. He volleyed home the opener against Uzbekistan and struck the only goal against Congo, finishing a pass from substitute Juan Fernando Quintero. For a team built around attacking flair, leaning on a full-back for goals is a curious quirk. It speaks well of the side under coach Néstor Lorenzo that goals are arriving from across the team. It is also a reminder that the famous front line, Díaz chief

among them, has yet to fully fire. Díaz, now at Bayern Munich, has still left his mark, scoring and setting up a goal in the opener and striking the post during that win. The finishing has simply not always matched the chances his team creates. That is the gap Lorenzo will want closed before the knockouts. A side that survives on narrow margins in the group stage tends to need its strikers firing once the single-game ties begin. Why finishing first matters for Colombia’s World

Cup knockout draw The detail that makes Saturday worth watching is the reward for topping the group. Per the published qualification scenarios, the Group K winner faces a third-placed team from another group in the last thirty-two. The runner-up, by contrast, is paired with the runner-up of Group L, expected to be Croatia. In plain terms, winning the group should hand Colombia a weaker opponent that scraped through in third, rather than a seeded side. A draw against Portugal is enough to secure that softer

route. A defeat would drop them to second and into the harder half of the bracket. That is the real stake in Miami. The match looks like a clash of two giants, but for Colombia the prize is a kinder path through the rounds that follow. Who could Colombia face in the Colombia World Cup knockout draw? If Colombia finish top of Group K, they face one of the eight best third-placed teams in the last thirty-two. If they finish second, they are paired with

the Group L runner-up, most likely Croatia. What do Colombia need against Portugal? A draw or a win against Portugal will see Colombia finish first in the group. Only a defeat would push them down to second place and into a tougher knockout draw. Who has scored Colombia’s goals so far? Right-back Daniel Muñoz has scored the decisive goal in both of Colombia’s wins. Luis Díaz and Jáminton Campaz scored the others in the opening victory over Uzbekistan. Connected Coverage For the wider regional picture,

see our guide to South America’s six teams at the 2026 World Cup. And for an unusual business angle, read how a factory in Cali beat Asia to make Colombia’s World Cup shirt.

Colombia, World Cup 2026, Group K, Portugal, Miami, Daniel Muñoz, Luis Díaz, Néstor Lorenzo, knockout draw, Croatia, last thirty-two

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