The FIFA World Cup 2026 quarter-final stage is almost upon us, and what a set of fixtures it promises to be. From an Iberian derby that could light up Dallas to a tantalising North African challenge in Boston, the coming days will separate the contenders from the pretenders – and South African fans will have plenty of reasons to stay glued to their screens through the early hours.
The Iberian Derby – Dallas Beckons
The pick of the bunch arrives on Monday night when Portugal face Spain at Dallas Stadium, with kickoff scheduled for 21:00 local time. Two of football’s most storied nations collide in what is essentially a derby match dressed up in World Cup colours. Cristiano Ronaldo’s burning desire to finally lift the trophy before his international career closes could not be more sharply tested than against a Spanish side brimming with Barcelona and Real Madrid talent. This is a game that demands a second cup of coffee for South African viewers catching it in the small hours of Tuesday morning.
African Eyes on Atlanta and Boston
For the continent, two fixtures carry enormous emotional weight. Egypt take on Argentina at Atlanta Stadium on Tuesday at 18:00 – and the Pharaohs’ run to the quarter-finals will have had African football buzzing from Cairo to Cape Town. Standing between Egypt and a historic semi-final berth is the small matter of Lionel Messi and a defending champion that does not know how to lose tournament football easily. It will require an Egyptian performance for the ages, but stranger things have happened at this World Cup.
Then comes the fixture that will arguably resonate most deeply across the African continent. France meet Morocco at Boston Stadium on Thursday at 22:00 local time – a rematch of the unforgettable 2022 semi-final that saw the Atlas Lions push Les Bleus to the very limit before bowing out. Morocco are back, they are hungrier, and their ability to absorb pressure and strike with devastating precision makes them the most dangerous side left in the competition outside of the traditional heavyweights. South Africans remember Morocco’s 2022 run with immense pride, and a place in the semi-final this time around would be nothing short of extraordinary.
European Heavyweight Clashes
Switzerland meet Colombia in Vancouver at 22:00 on Tuesday – a fascinating tactical contest between Swiss pragmatism and Colombian flair. Meanwhile, Norway and England square off in Miami on Saturday at 23:00, with Erling Haaland’s presence alone enough to keep English fans awake at night. England will fancy their chances but Norway, with their physical directness, are no side to underestimate.
United States face Belgium in Seattle at 02:00 on Tuesday morning – a tie that matters deeply to the host nation, who will be desperate to keep their World Cup dream alive on home soil.
The Wildcards
Two quarter-final spots remain to be confirmed, with the winners of Round of Sixteen clashes five and six meeting in Los Angeles on Friday at 21:00, and clashes seven and eight producing a Sunday showdown in Kansas City at 03:00.
It is a schedule that will test the dedication of even the most committed South African football supporter – but with African representation, Iberian fireworks and genuine title contenders on every side, not a single minute should be missed.


