World Cup 2026: Norway hold off Côte d’Ivoire to reach Round of 16

Radio Univers
6 Min Read
Erling Haaland leads Norway past Ivory Coast into the last 16 of the 2026 World Cup

Norway held off a fierce Cote d’Ivoire comeback to win 2-1 in Arlington and move into the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 16, where Brazil now await.

Antonio Nusa’s first-half strike and Erling Haaland’s late winner proved decisive after Amad Diallo briefly dragged the Elephants level with a superb solo goal.

The knockout tie had the rhythm of a match that could turn at any moment. Cote d’Ivoire controlled large parts of the first half, pressed Norway into uncomfortable areas and repeatedly tested their defence from wide positions.

Yet Norway carried the sharper final-third threat, and their biggest players delivered when the margins tightened.

Cote d’Ivoire began with greater urgency and forced Norway deep through a series of corners and low deliveries into the box.

Guela Doue and the wide runners kept stretching the Norwegian back line, while the Elephants looked to overload the penalty area whenever they could move the ball quickly into crossing positions.

Norway struggled to build sustained possession during that spell, but they remained dangerous in transition.

Martin Odegaard tried to connect midfield to attack, while Alexander Sorloth and Haaland occupied the centre-backs. The match soon became a contrast between Cote d’Ivoire’s pressure and Norway’s ability to strike with fewer chances.

The opening goal arrived in the 39th minute, against the run of play. Nusa received the ball in space and curled a brilliant finish beyond Yahia Fofana into the far corner. It was Norway’s clearest moment of quality in the first half and changed the mood of the contest instantly.

The second half opened with Cote d’Ivoire chasing the match and Norway trying to manage the tempo. The Elephants nearly found a route back when Doue drove a dangerous low cross through the six-yard box, but no orange shirt arrived in time to turn it in.

Norway survived, though not comfortably.

The match shifted again after Cote d’Ivoire made attacking changes. Amad Diallo became increasingly influential, first producing a vital intervention near his own goal.

In the 66th minute, after Sorloth’s knockdown created danger inside the box, Diallo raced back to clear off the line and deny Norway what looked like a second goal.

Seven minutes later, he made his mark at the other end. Diallo collected the ball, drove at the Norwegian defence and weaved through challenges before finishing past Orjan Nyland.

The goal was one of the standout individual moments of the game and gave Cote d’Ivoire the momentum they had been building towards. For a brief spell, Norway looked vulnerable.

Cote d’Ivoire attacked with speed, the crowd sensed another twist, and Norway had to reorganise after substitutions. Nusa departed to applause, with Andreas Schjelderup introduced, while Oscar Bobb came on for Sorloth to add energy late in the game.

But Norway’s response was clinical.

In the 83rd minute, Patrick Berg found space to square the ball across goal after a slick passing move. Haaland, quiet for stretches but alert when it mattered, arrived in the right place to tap in and restore Norway’s lead.

Cote d’Ivoire still pushed until the final whistle. Diallo returned after brief treatment, and the Elephants kept loading balls into the Norway area. With seven minutes of stoppage time added, Norway needed composure, defensive concentration and one major save from Nyland to protect their lead.

Nyland’s decisive intervention came when Konan whipped in a cross that threatened to dip under the bar. The Norway goalkeeper reacted quickly, reaching up to tip the ball away and remove one of Cote d’Ivoire’s final routes to extra time. It was a save that carried the weight of a knockout result.

For Cote d’Ivoire, the defeat will sting because they contributed heavily to the contest. They were aggressive, brave in possession and dangerous from wide areas.

Diallo’s cameo, in particular, captured both the quality and fight in their performance. Yet their inability to convert early pressure left them chasing the game for too long.

Norway, meanwhile, move forward with a performance that showed both promise and warning signs. Nusa’s goal underlined their attacking quality, Haaland again delivered in a decisive moment, and Odegaard remained central to their control when Norway found rhythm. But Brazil will ask harder questions of their defensive structure and ball retention.

The Round of 16 meeting with the five-time champions now becomes Norway’s biggest test of the tournament. They have already shown they can survive pressure and punish mistakes. Against Brazil, they will need the same edge in front of goal, with far fewer lapses in between.

Story by Xavier Mensah | univers.ug.edu.gh

Edited by Erica Odeenyin Odoom

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