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Haaland's Heroic Double Stuns Brazil and Sends Norway into World Cup Quarter-Finals

World Cup Stadium – We're going to need a bigger longboat. Norway are into the quarter-finals of the World Cup for the first time, progressing thanks to the man whose smile, and choice in cowboy apparel, has charmed the US. Erling Haaland delivered again for his country, scoring two goals in the last 10 minutes – his sixth and seventh of the tournament – to send Brazil home and keep the Viking invasion rolling on.

The result is a massive vindication for Ståle Solbakken and the team he has built over the past half decade. Norway set out to dominate Brazil in the first half, without much in the way of success. A double substitution at half-time changed all that, with Norway able to carve open a Brazil side who had their chances but failed to take them.

Such a prospect was never likely with Haaland, who scored two goals from four attempts and has 30 goals in his past 17 competitive fixtures for Norway. The opening goal came with nine minutes to go, a cross from the substitute Andreas Schjelderup met with a towering leap above his rival at club level Gabriel Magalhães and a dagger header past Alisson.

Key developments:

  • Norway beat Brazil 2-1 to reach World Cup quarter-finals
  • Erling Haaland scores twice in final 10 minutes (79th and 89th)
  • Haaland now has 7 goals in tournament, 62 in 54 international appearances
  • Neymar scores stoppage-time penalty for Brazil (90+10)
  • Norway's first-ever World Cup quarter-final appearance
  • Brazil's fifth World Cup title hopes ended
  • Haaland has 30 goals in past 17 competitive fixtures for Norway
  • Bruno Guimarães missed first-half penalty for Brazil
  • Norway's Andreas Schjelderup provided both assists
  • Neymar leaves the field in tears as Brazil exit

Haaland's Historic Double

Haaland has barely had a touch this game but this is what he does. Schjelderup floated the ball across and Haaland leapt and thumped the ball home with his head. Of course he did.

He did it again minutes later. Schjelderup was the provider again. He passed to Haaland on the edge of the area. No one was marking him – why would you? He's only the best striker in the world. And Haaland skimmed the ball into the corner. A fantastic finish.

Norway's talisman celebrated largely by just standing and smiling. His colleagues and the streak of Norwegian supporters behind the goal did the rest.

Neymar Jr of Brazil converts the penalty against Norway
Neymar Jr of Brazil converts the penalty. The Brazilian star scored in stoppage time but it was too late to prevent Norway's historic victory.

How the Match Unfolded

This had felt like an intriguing match-up, with Norway coming off the back of their first World Cup knockout win and Brazil very much still a work in progress. Carlo Ancelotti surprised everyone by naming Gabriel Martinelli in his XI. A replacement for the injured Lucas Paquetá, Martinelli assumed the former's central midfield position – despite never playing there for his club – and was tasked not only with driving Brazil up the pitch but leading their counter-press.

It was an unusual sight and while spectators were still trying to grasp the Brazilian formation, Norway had the ball in the net. In the third minute, a lovely through ball from Martin Ødegaard allowed Julian Ryerson to cut the ball back to any number of waiting attackers, with Patrick Berg applying the finishing touch. The flag went up against Ryerson, however, and the video assistant referee confirmed the call.

Another overturn worked in Brazil's favour 10 minutes later. Matheus Cunha was taken out by Kristoffer Ajer at the end of a swift move, but the American referee Ismail Elfath said no penalty. The VAR felt otherwise, clearly the correct decision, and on review Elfath reversed his call.

The expectation was that this would be a moment for Vinícius Júnior, but Bruno Guimarães stepped up instead. Only an occasional taker for his club, he went for a stuttering run-up and saw a weak effort saved well by Ørjan Håskjold Nyland to the goalkeeper's left. Ancelotti said the choice of taker had been made as a result of an internal statistical analysis.

Norway's Erling Haaland scores their second goal against Brazil
Norway's Erling Haaland scores their second goal against Brazil. The striker's second strike in the 89th minute sealed Norway's place in the quarter-finals.

Nyland's Heroics and Brazil's Missed Chances

Before the half was out both sides could have scored again: Vinícius and Martinelli drew saves from Nyland, and Martin Ødegaard capitalised on some penalty-area chaos in added time to force a decent stop from Alisson. Haaland, at this point, was largely peripheral.

At half-time, Solbakken rebooted his side, withdrawing both wingers and bringing on Schjelderup and Oscar Bobb. Ancelotti made his first change shortly after, replacing Cunha with Endrick, and the teenager was in on goal within seconds. Superb vision from Vinícius sent Endrick clear but his second touch was heavy and, with space closing around him, he could only flick a left-foot shot wide.

Brazil began briefly to grow in possession and Norway started to play on the counter more often, a tactic that worked. Alisson was forced to turn away two decent crosses from the Norway left, and almost put one into the path of Haaland. Five minutes later, sheer brute force from the Norwegian No 9 held off both Brazilian centre-halves and Schjelderup should have scored when played into the box.

Brazil made more changes, with no positive effect. Neymar, the hero of the Brazilian public, was destined to have his minutes from the bench, but as he went central, Endrick went wide and disappeared from the game. Then with nine minutes to go, Guimarães – who had a strong game, penalty aside – was also withdrawn owing to fatigue. Norway took the lead within 60 seconds and doubled it 11 minutes later.

Nyland claws the ball away for Norway against Brazil
Ørjan Nyland claws the ball away for Norway. The goalkeeper made crucial saves throughout the match, including a first-half penalty stop.

Neymar's Tears and Brazil's Exit

Ultimately, Neymar did get on the scoresheet. He did so by scoring a penalty with a stuttering run-up, in the ninth minute of seven minutes of added time. It was too late, however. As Neymar left the field in tears, an era came to an end. The five-time champions are still the five-time champions – they will not be adding a sixth trophy to their collection.

Brazil's fifth World Cup title hopes have been ended by the man who is now the tournament's top scorer. Haaland has 7 goals in this World Cup and 62 in 54 international appearances. He has 30 goals in his past 17 competitive fixtures for Norway.

Erling Haaland of Norway scores with a bullet header against Brazil
Erling Haaland of Norway scores with a bullet header. The striker's towering leap above Gabriel Magalhães gave Norway the lead in the 79th minute.

What's Next for Norway

Norway will now sail to Miami for the quarter-finals, where they will face the winners of the Colombia-Ghana match. The Viking invasion continues, and with Haaland in this form, no one will want to face them.

Solbakken's decision to rest his stars against France has been completely vindicated. Norway are into the quarter-finals for the first time in their history, and they have done it by beating the five-time world champions.

As Haaland celebrated his second goal by simply standing and smiling, it was clear that this is just the beginning for Norway's golden generation.

7
Goals for Haaland in this World Cup
62
Goals in 54 appearances for Norway
30
Goals in past 17 competitive fixtures

⚽ The Big Picture

Norway's 2-1 victory over Brazil is one of the great World Cup upsets. The Scandinavians, who had never won a knockout match before this tournament, are now into the quarter-finals after beating the five-time world champions. Erling Haaland, the man who could have played for England, has instead become Norway's greatest ever footballer – and he is only 25. His two goals in the final 10 minutes were the difference, taking his tournament tally to seven and his international total to 62 in 54 appearances. For Brazil, it's another early exit. Neymar's tears at the final whistle marked the end of an era, while Carlo Ancelotti's tactical experiments failed to pay off. The Viking longboat sails on to Miami – and no one will want to stand in its way.

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This article was last updated on July 6, 2026 at 8:36 AM
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