World Cup 2026 Results: 21 June Recap
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The overnight programme into Monday morning AEST delivered one statement performance, one piece of small-nation history and a first World Cup win for an African heavyweight. Four matches were played on 21 June across Groups G and H, and by the time the dust settled Spain had booked their place in the Round of 32 while Group G turned into a genuine logjam. This recap sets out exactly what happened, in the order it matters for punters reading the markets ahead of Matchday 3.

A full house under the lights as Matchday 2 wrapped up in Groups G and H.
Contents
- Results at a glance
- Spain 4–0 Saudi Arabia: La Roja into the Round of 32
- Egypt 3–1 New Zealand: Salah inspires a first win
- Uruguay 2–2 Cape Verde: history for the Blue Sharks
- Belgium 0–0 Iran: ten-man stalemate
- What it means for the markets
- FAQ
Results at a glance
| Match | Group | Score | Key moments |
|---|---|---|---|
| Spain vs Saudi Arabia | H | 4–0 | Yamal, Oyarzabal (2), Al-Tambakti OG |
| Egypt vs New Zealand | G | 3–1 | Zizo, Salah, Trezeguet; Surman for NZ |
| Uruguay vs Cape Verde | H | 2–2 | Pina, Varela (CPV); Araújo, Canobbio (URU) |
| Belgium vs Iran | G | 0–0 | Belgium’s Nathan Ngoy sent off (66′) |
Spain 4–0 Saudi Arabia
La Roja produced the most emphatic display of the night. Lamine Yamal opened the scoring inside the opening exchanges before Mikel Oyarzabal struck twice in quick succession either side of the 20-minute mark, and an Al-Tambakti own goal early in the second half rounded off a 4–0 win. The result lifted Spain to the top of Group H and, per the match reports, carried them through to the Round of 32 with a game to spare.
For punters who had Spain shortest in the group market, this was the clean, low-variance performance the price demanded. It also reinforced Spain’s standing near the top of the outright board, where they were quoted at 6.50 (as of 21 June).
Egypt 3–1 New Zealand
Mohamed Salah delivered the moment of the night in Group G. New Zealand’s Marcus Surman struck first inside the opening quarter-hour, but Egypt responded through Zizo, Salah and Trezeguet to win 3–1 — a first World Cup win that pushed Egypt to the top of Group G on four points. It is a notable swing in a group where, after this round, four points already buys top spot and two points still keeps you very much alive.
Uruguay 2–2 Cape Verde
The romance of the round belonged to Cape Verde. Trailing twice would have been the script for most World Cup debutants, but the Blue Sharks twice found a way back to draw 2–2 with Uruguay. Dailon Livramento Pina’s strike was recorded as Cape Verde’s first-ever World Cup goal, and a second draw from two matches keeps the smallest of footballing nations within touching distance of the knockout places.
- Spain’s 4–0 win sealed top spot in Group H and, per match reports, a Round-of-32 berth with a match to spare.
- Egypt’s first World Cup win lifted them to the summit of a tightly packed Group G.
- Cape Verde scored their first-ever World Cup goal and banked a second straight draw.
- Belgium were held to a third stalemate of frustration after going down to ten men.
Belgium 0–0 Iran
Belgium’s night unravelled when Nathan Ngoy was shown a red card on 66 minutes, and the Red Devils could not break a disciplined Iran in a 0–0 draw. Both sides sit on two points in Group G, which leaves the section finely poised: Egypt lead on four, with Iran and Belgium level on two and New Zealand on one.
What it means for the markets
Two themes carry into the next matchday. First, the chalk held in Group H — Spain did exactly what favourites are supposed to do, and the draw between Uruguay and Cape Verde keeps the runner-up race open. Second, Group G is now a coin-flip section where a single result can reorder the table, which is precisely the kind of volatility that widens prices on the betting markets overview. As always, treat in-running group prices as a snapshot: these lines moved on the night and will move again before Matchday 3.
Odds quoted are decimal and reflect the figures available as of 21 June 2026; lines move quickly during a tournament. Bet within your limits — 18+. Aussie punters can compare current prices across our partner books, including BetiBet, ZotaBet and Boomerang Bet, in AUD.