World Cup quarterfinals schedule: Start times for every match and how to watch
The 2026 FIFA World Cup quarterfinals are set to begin Thursday when Kylian Mbappé and France take on an upset-minded Morocco team.
World Cup co-hosts U.S., Canada and Mexico will be watching from the sideline after being eliminated in the round of 16.
Here's everything you need to know about the World Cup matches being played Thursday, Friday and Saturday across the U.S., Mexico and Canada (all times Pacific).
Thursday's quarterfinal match
France vs. Morocco
Where: Gillette Stadium, Foxborough, Mass.
Time: 1 p.m.
TV:Fox, Telemundo | Streaming:Fox One, Peacock
The buzz:France, bidding to make its third consecutive World Cup final, needed a penalty kick from Kylian Mbappé to dispatch stubborn Paraguay, a third-place team, in the round of 16. France has scored 16 times - Mbappé has seven of them, giving him 19 career World Cup goals - while goalkeeper Mike Maignan has conceded just two goals in five matches. Morocco, a semifinalist four years ago, advanced with a 3-0 win over Canada that ran its unbeaten streak to 34 games. Azzedine Ounahi scored twice in that game and is one of three Moroccan players with multiple goals. Morocco, a former French colony, has almost as many French-born players on its roster, six, as it does native Moroccans, seven.
Friday's quarterfinal match
Spain vs. Belgium
Where: SoFi Stadium, Inglewood
Time: Noon
TV:Fox, Telemundo | Streaming:Fox One, Peacock
The buzz:Spain is the first team in World Cup history to record six consecutive shutouts and goalkeeper Unai Simón has gone 609 minutes without allowing a World Cup goal, a streak that dates to group play of the last tournament four years ago. Spain, however, has struggled to score consistently, collecting a goal or less in three of its five games, including a round-of-16 win over Portugal on Mikel Merino's goal in stoppage time. Mikel Oyarzabal is Spain's leading scorer with four goals. Belgium earned its place in the quarterfinals by thumping the U.S. 4-1 in Seattle in its most complete game of the tournament. Belgium outshot the Americans 15-7, putting seven on target. Charles De Ketelaere had a brace in the first half and Belgium never looked back. For an aging golden generation of Belgian players, including Kevin De Bruyne, Romelu Lukaku, Thibaut Courtois and Axel Witsel, this might be the final chance to grab a title.
Saturday's quarterfinal matches
Norway vs. England
Where: Hard Rock Stadium, Miami Gardens, Fla.
Time: 2 p.m.
TV:Fox, Telemundo | Streaming:Fox One, Peacock
The buzz:The forecast calls for temperatures in the high 80s, humidity at 77% and a chance of rain, challenging conditions for two teams from northern Europe. Norway, which knocked off Brazil to reach the quarterfinals for the first time, has scored 12 times in five games - Erling Haaland has seven of those, including both against Brazil - but has conceded nine, winning just once by more than a goal. Haaland's 39% shot-conversation rate is the best in a World Cup since 1986. Unbeaten England had to gut out a tough win in the rare air of Mexico City with just 10 men to reach the quarterfinals for a third straight time. Captain Harry Kane is fourth in the Golden Boot race with six goals.
Argentina vs. Switzerland
Where: Arrowhead Stadium, Kansas City, Mo.
Time: 6 p.m.
TV:Fox, Telemundo | Streaming:Fox One, Peacock
The buzz:Unbeaten Argentina needed three goals in 13 minutes to stay that way, barely escaping its round-of-16 game with Egypt on Enzo Fernández's goal in stoppage time. Lionel Messi's tying goal in the 83rd minute extended his World Cup scoring streak to nine games. He entered the quarterfinals leading the tournament with eight goals. Switzerland, also unbeaten, eliminated Colombia on penalties to reach the quarterfinals for the first time since 1954. The Swiss have nine goals, three of those coming from 20-year-old Johan Manzambi, the youngest player on the team.
This story originally appeared in Los Angeles Times.
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This story was originally published July 8, 2026 at 9:44 AM.