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World Cup 2026 Draw Shakes Up Football World, Trump Grabs Unexpected Peace Prize

Published 1 day ago4 minute read
Pelumi Ilesanmi
Pelumi Ilesanmi
World Cup 2026 Draw Shakes Up Football World, Trump Grabs Unexpected Peace Prize

The highly anticipated draw for the 2026 World Cup has set the stage for an intriguing tournament, with England drawn into Group L alongside familiar foes Croatia and Panama, as well as new opponents Ghana. This draw sets up a rematch of their 2018 semi-final against Croatia, a game England lost 2-1 in extra time. However, England has since beaten Croatia 1-0 in the opening match of the 2021 European Championship. Against Panama, England secured a decisive 6-1 victory in the 2018 group stage. The Three Lions have never faced Ghana in a World Cup fixture. Thomas Tuchel, reflecting on the draw, described it as a “Difficult group, difficult opener”, noting Croatia and Ghana as “two regulars in World Cups and two proud and strong nations.”

The group stage matches for England will be split across four US cities – Dallas, Boston, New York/New Jersey, and Philadelphia – and Toronto, Canada. While Croatia's “golden generation” has largely retired, veterans Ivan Perisic and Luka Modric, now 36 and 40 respectively, still pose a threat. Ghana has featured in four of the past five tournaments, although they are not considered as strong as the team that reached the quarter-finals in 2010. Their squad includes notable players like Tottenham’s Mohammed Kudus and Antoine Semenyo of Bournemouth. Panama, ranked 30th in the world, enters the tournament unbeaten through two rounds of qualifying, despite lacking household names.

Other notable draws include Scotland in Group C, facing a partial repeat of their 1998 World Cup campaign against Brazil and Morocco, alongside Haiti. Group I has been dubbed a potential “Group of Death,” featuring seeds France, Senegal, Erling Haaland’s Norway, and a winner from an international playoff. The USA will compete against Australia, Paraguay, and a European playoff winner. The tournament, for the first time in its 96-year history, will feature 48 teams, playing a record 104 matches across 16 host cities in the United States, Canada, and Mexico. A recent Fifa decision prevents the four highest-ranked sides – Spain, Argentina, France, and England – from playing each other before the semi-finals, adding a layer of strategic complexity to the competition.

England’s potential progression path could see them face a third-placed team from groups E, J, I, H, or K in the last 32 if they win their group. A subsequent victory could lead to a match against the winners of Group A, which includes Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, and a playoff winner involving the Republic of Ireland. This scenario could pave the way for a quarter-final clash against Brazil and a semi-final encounter with Argentina, following Fifa's seeding changes.

The World Cup draw event in Washington DC also served as the platform for the controversial inaugural Fifa Peace Prize, awarded to former US President Donald Trump. Gianni Infantino, the Fifa president and a close ally of Trump, presented the honour at the Kennedy Center for the Performing Arts, citing Trump's “exceptional and extraordinary actions to promote peace and unity around the world.” Accepting the award, which included a trophy, medal, and certificate, Trump called it “one of the great honours of my life,” claiming to have “saved millions and millions of lives” and “ended” various wars, including those in the Congo, India and Pakistan, Gaza, and between Israel and Iran. He also praised Infantino for “setting new records on ticket sales” and declared that “the world is a safer place now.”

However, Trump's claims of peacemaking have faced significant scrutiny. Many of the conflicts he cited, such as the Gaza conflict, are ongoing or have seen his interventions criticized as one-sided and ineffective. Claims of ending conflicts in places like the Congo, Serbia and Kosovo, and Egypt and Ethiopia have been largely disputed or described as imaginary. Fifa's decision to present the award, without disclosing details of the selection process, has intensified scrutiny of the organization’s close alignment with Trump's political circle. This relationship has grown increasingly visible, with Infantino and Trump appearing together at summits and Ivanka Trump being appointed to the board of a $100 million education initiative funded in part by 2026 World Cup ticket revenues. Despite the controversies, Fifa continues to promote the 2026 tournament as an opportunity to “unite the world,” while Infantino maintains that football can carry “a message of peace” even if it “cannot solve conflict.”

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