There couldn't be a more fitting final.
The tournament's most organised, most defensively imperious team, Spain, who have conceded once in seven matches, kept six clean sheets, and dismantled France 2-0 with the clinical composure of a team that knows exactly what it is, against the most dramatic, emotionally exhausting, Messi-powered rollercoaster any World Cup has produced in a generation.
Argentina survived Cape Verde in extra time in the Round of 32. Came back from 0-2 down against Egypt in the Round of 16. Benefited from a VAR controversy and survived extra time against Switzerland in the quarterfinals. Came back from 1-0 down against England in the semifinal, with Lionel Messi, 39 years old, playing his final World Cup, assisting both comeback goals in the last ten minutes of regulation.
Sunday July 19 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey: Spain vs Argentina. The World Cup Final. The most deserving possible conclusion.
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| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Match | Spain vs Argentina |
| Date | Sunday 19 July 2026 |
| Kick-off | 3pm ET / 8pm BST / 19:00 GMT (21:00 on Duelbits) |
| Venue | MetLife Stadium, East Rutherford, New Jersey |
| Capacity | ~82,500 |
| Broadcast | FOX, Telemundo (US) |
| Spain Manager | Luis de la Fuente |
| Argentina Manager | Lionel Scaloni |
Third Place Playoff:
Live at Duelbits World Cup 26 with 194+ markets on the final.
| Spain | Draw | Argentina |
|---|---|---|
| 2.34 | 2.95 | 3.50 |
| Spain | Argentina |
|---|---|
| 1.61 | 2.20 |
| Player | Team | Odds |
|---|---|---|
| Messi, Lionel | Argentina | 1.40 |
| Mbappé, Kylian | France | 2.30 |
| Kane, Harry | England | 36.00 |
| Bellingham, Jude | England | 51.00 |
| Oyarzabal, Mikiel | Spain | 150.00 |
| Spain eliminated by penalty shootout | Yes | No |
|---|---|---|
| 9.25 | 1.07 |
| Round | Match | Result | Goals |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group | vs Saudi Arabia | Win | 4-0 |
| Group | vs Uruguay | Win | 1-0 |
| Group | vs Cape Verde (rotation) | Draw | 0-0 |
| R32 | vs Austria | Win | 3-0 |
| R16 | vs Portugal | Win | 1-0 (Merino 90+3') |
| QF | vs Belgium | Win | 2-1 (Merino 88') |
| SF | vs France | Win | 2-0 |
Spain booked a spot in the finals after defeating France 2-0 in Tuesday's first semifinal at AT&T Stadium. Spain's defence once again proved to be the difference-maker, recording its sixth clean sheet of the tournament while keeping France off the scoreboard.
Seven matches. Six clean sheets. One goal conceded (Portugal's equaliser in the R16 before Merino's 90th-minute winner). Twenty-three goals against opposition that included the tournament's most prolific attacking side (France, 16 goals going in).
| Round | Match | Result | Drama |
|---|---|---|---|
| Group | vs Algeria | Win | 3-0 |
| Group | vs Canada | Win | 2-0 |
| Group | vs Japan | Draw | 1-1 |
| R32 | vs Cape Verde | Win 3-2 AET | Pushed to extra time |
| R16 | vs Egypt | Win 3-2 | From 0-2 down, 3 goals in 13 minutes |
| QF | vs Switzerland | Win 3-1 AET | VAR controversy, 10-man Switzerland |
| SF | vs England | Win 2-1 | From 1-0 down, two goals in last 10 minutes |
Argentina has made a habit this tournament of scoring late. According to the Fox broadcast, it had scored nine goals at this World Cup after the 75th minute, entering today. Against England, they made it ten.
Spain's victory over France in Dallas was comprehensive in a way the scoreline only partially reflects. France had scored 16 tournament goals entering the semifinal, behind only Argentina's 17. Spain suffocated them.
Mikel Oyarzabal scored on a penalty kick in the 22nd minute after Lamine Yamal drew a penalty. Pedro Porro made it 2-0 in the 58th minute, as Spain goalkeeper Unai Simón had a clean sheet.
Lamine Yamal played a crucial role in his team's 2-0 semifinal victory over France, creating the moment that changed the match. The match came just one day after Yamal celebrated his 19th birthday, and his performance gave Spain manager Luis de la Fuente another example of the maturity he has shown throughout his first World Cup appearance.
Mbappe gave a candid assessment of France's performance after the defeat, admitting his team failed to execute its game plan and allowed Spain too much control. "We didn't play the game we wanted, technically or tactically," Mbappe said. "When you don't do what you have to do in a World Cup semifinal, you don't win."
Mbappé ended the tournament with 6 goals, every goal scored by France. Against Spain, he was anonymous. The Spanish press box was in agreement: Rodri and Fabian Ruiz controlled the midfield entirely, denying France time and space to build anything.
The implication for the final: Argentina will need to solve a tactical problem that France, the world's most prolific attacking side of this tournament, could not solve in 90 minutes.
Argentina, the death-defying defending World Cup champion, will play for a second consecutive title after scoring two late goals to beat England in the semifinal, 2-1. For a fourth straight knockout game, Argentina survived a heart-stoppingly close call.
Argentina dramatically took down England on Wednesday. It scored twice after the 80th minute to come back from a 1-0 deficit. Enzo Fernández scored the first goal, nailing a shot from outside the box in the 85th minute. Messi provided the assist. In stoppage time, Lautaro Martínez headed home from another Messi assist.
The pattern is documented. Every knockout game: Argentina behind, Argentina under pressure, Argentina surviving. The combination of Messi's genius, late-game courage, and a margin of fortune has carried them through six matches. The question the final poses is whether Spain's defensive system is the wall that finally stops them.
Spain's six clean sheets in seven matches is the single most compelling statistical argument for any team in a World Cup Final in recent memory. They have conceded once across the entire tournament, a counter-attacking equaliser by Portugal in the R16 that was immediately answered by Merino's winner.
Goalkeeper Unai Simón, kept out of the team for most of the tournament by form considerations, has been immaculate when called upon. The back four's defensive organisation under Rodri's midfield cover has been the tournament's most complete defensive unit.
The penalty shootout market at 9.25 Yes / 1.07 No for Spain being eliminated by shootout reflects six clean sheets and a team that has consistently won matches in normal time. This is the team that keeps the ball, controls the game tempo, and makes opponents play Spain's way.
At 2.34, Spain is the rational first pick. Organise against Spain the way France organised and you end up 0-2 at half-time. Argentina's defensive record is not Spain's, they've conceded in multiple knockout games. Spain's attack, when it fires, is relentlessly efficient.
Lamine Yamal: On his 19th birthday, Yamal drew the penalty that changed the Spain vs France semifinal and controlled the right channel across 90 minutes. In the World Cup Final, against Argentina's left side, Yamal could be the decisive individual.
Mikel Merino: Two late super-sub goals in consecutive knockout matches. A match-winner off the bench is the rarest and most valuable asset in a Final.
Rodri: The midfield anchor and orchestrator. If Spain control midfield the way they did against France, Argentina will find no route to Messi.
Everything ultimately comes back to Messi. At 39 years old, in what is definitively his final World Cup, Messi has produced one of the great individual tournament performances in the sport's history.
Lionel Messi celebrates the team's second goal by Lautaro Martínez during their World Cup semifinal against England on Wednesday in Atlanta. He assisted both. Two goals in seven minutes at 39. The greatest individual to ever play the game has saved his very best for the last dance.
Eight goals in the tournament entering the semifinal. Multiple assists. The Golden Boot at 1.40 on Duelbits reflects his statistical dominance over every other player in the field. Mbappé at 2.30 finished the tournament with France's elimination, he cannot add to his tally. Messi plays in the Final.
Argentina is one win away from becoming the first nation to win back-to-back men's World Cups since Brazil did so in 1958 and 1962. The historical weight of that prize, and Messi's personal history with it, cannot be separated from the analytical picture.
Argentina has scored 17 goals in seven matches. Only Spain (clean sheets) and France (goals) have better attacking or defensive tournament records. Argentina's dual ability, to score frequently and to find goals in the most extreme late-game pressure situations, makes them the most dangerous team to face at 3.50.
The comeback factor: Spain has never been behind in this tournament. Their defensive system has been tested, but they have not faced a deficit that requires adjustment. Argentina coming back from 0-1 is not a hypothetical, it happened against England. The mental calibration Spain need if Argentina score first is an unknown.
The final comes down to one question: can Argentina's front line find space against Spain's midfield block?
France could not. France with Mbappé, Dembélé, and the tournament's most productive attack, they scored 16 goals before meeting Spain, were suppressed to zero. The Spanish press and defensive shape created a wall that France's quality could not penetrate.
Argentina doesn't play like France. Messi operates deeper, creating space rather than running channels. Álvarez and Lautaro are more physical than France's attackers. The Argentine style, possession combined with direct transitions, suits a different matchup than France's counter-attacking speed.
Whether that stylistic difference produces a different outcome against Spain's defensive system is the core analytical question of the final.
| Market | Selection | Duelbits Odds | Reasoning |
|---|---|---|---|
| Match winner | Spain | 2.34 | Six clean sheets, Rodri control, suffocated France's 16-goal attack |
| Match winner (value) | Argentina | 3.50 | Messi's final Final, 17 tournament goals, comeback factor vs Spain never having been behind |
| Golden Boot | Messi to score | (check firstscorer) | 1.40 on Golden Boot; one more goal cements it. Mbappé cannot add to his tally |
| Total goals | Under 2.5 | Check Duelbits | Spain's defensive record (6 CS), low-scoring knockout game pattern, tactical stalemate probability |
| Outright | Spain to win | 1.61 | Tournament form market, six clean sheets and Spain's overall dominance reflects in shorter outright |
Bet on all 194+ World Cup Final markets at Duelbits World Cup 26.
For our complete 2026 World Cup coverage, see our semifinal betting preview, quarterfinals guide, and World Cup 26 Showdown guide, predict the Final correct score on Matchday 8 to share the $4,000 prize pool.
Who is in the 2026 World Cup Final? Spain vs Argentina, Sunday July 19 at MetLife Stadium, New Jersey (3pm ET / 8pm BST).
What are the final odds on Duelbits? Spain 2.34 / Draw 2.95 / Argentina 3.50. Outright winner: Spain 1.61 / Argentina 2.20.
How did Spain get to the final? Beat France 2-0 in the semifinal (Dallas, July 14). Oyarzabal penalty (22') and Porro (58'), Spain's sixth clean sheet of the tournament. First World Cup Final for Spain since they won it in 2010.
How did Argentina get to the final? Beat England 2-1 (Atlanta, July 15). Enzo Fernández equalised in the 85th minute and Lautaro Martínez headed the winner in stoppage time, both goals assisted by Messi. Argentina's fourth consecutive knockout comeback.
Can Argentina win back-to-back World Cups? Yes, if they win Sunday they become the first nation to win consecutive World Cups since Brazil in 1958 and 1962.
Who leads the Golden Boot? Messi at 1.40 on Duelbits, with 8 goals, having assisted both semifinal goals. Mbappé at 2.30 cannot add more (France eliminated). Messi plays in the Final.
What is Matchday 8 of World Cup Showdown? The final Matchday of our free-to-play correct score game, covers the Third Place Playoff and Final. Top 10 correct score predictors share the $4,000 Matchday 8 prize pool.