Meghan L. Hall
Updated July 18, 2026, 5:55 p.m. ET
MIAMI GARDENS, FL ―England has been one of the Top 5 scoring teams in the 2026 World Cup, and it didn’t need Harry Kane or Jude Bellingham to keep up the pace Saturday during its third-place match <a href="https://absafricatv.com/south-africa-names-ruto-in-fight-against-xenophobia-claims/” title=”South Africa Names Ruto in Fight Against Xenophobia Claims”>against France.
In the 3rd minute, England’s Declan Rice zipped the ball into the net off his right foot to make the score 1-0. Then, at the 18th minute, Ezri Konsa knocked a ball through with his head to make it 2-0. It was Konsa’s first career goal at the World Cup.
Just for good measure, Bukayo Saka added two more goals to make it 4-0 before haltime. Saka first scored in the 37th minute. France’s goalie was out of position, and after multiple tries to get around him and a nearby defender, Saka finally found the back of the net. The second goal came off a left-footed strike in the 46th minute.
If England beats France in Miami, it will have a bronze medal and $29 million in prize money waiting. An England win could also affect the team’s world ranking and qualifying draw for the 2030 World Cup. See the goal highlight below.
Declan Rice goal vs. France in World Cup
Ezri Konsa goal vs. France in World Cup
Bukayo Saka first goal vs France in World Cup
Bukayo Saka’s second goal vs France in World Cup
USA TODAY at the 2026 World Cup
The 2026 World Cup is the largest ever, and USA TODAY is going all in with reporters on the ground in all 16 host cities across three countries to cover 48 teams vying for the trophy. Get our World Cup: Extra Time newsletter in your inbox every morning and join our WhatsApp channel to get the latest updates right in your texts.
All games are being broadcast in the United States on Fox and FS1. Matches will also be broadcast in Spanish throughout the entirety of the World Cup on Telemundo and streaming on Peacock .
Meet Team USA 2026: Get to know the athletes behind the games
World Cup knockout round format
The World Cup becomes a single-elimination tournament once the knockout stage begins. The 32 remaining teams have been placed into a bracket, and the field will halve itself during each ensuing round of the tournament until a winner is crowned.
The lone exception is that the two semifinal losers will play in a third-place game ahead of the World Cup final.
World Cup knockout stage bracket, matchups, schedule
Round of 16
- July 4: France def Paraguay – Lincoln Financial Field, Philadelphia
- July 4: Morocco def Canada – Houston
- July 5: Norway def Brazil – East Rutherford
- July 5: England def Mexico – Mexico City
- July 6: Spain def Portugal – Arlington
- July 6: Belgium def USA – Seattle
- July 7: Argentina def Egypt – Atlanta
- July 7: Switzerland def Colombia – Vancouver
Quarterfinals
- July 9: France def Morocco – Foxborough
- July 10: Spain def Belgium – Inglewood
- July 11: England def England – Miami
- July 11: Argentina def Switzerland – Kansas City
Semifinals
- July 14: Spain def France – Arlington
- July 15: Argentina def England – Atlanta
Third Place Match
- July 18: France vs. England at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, Florida
Final
- July 19: Argentina vs. Spain at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey
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