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World Cup Semi-Finals Belong to France, Spain, Argentina and England

James O'Connor
James O'Connor
Soccer Analyst
1:20 AM
SOCCER
World Cup Semi-Finals Belong to France, Spain, Argentina and England
After 100 matches, the World Cup has narrowed to four former champions: France, Spain, Argentina and England. Yahoo Sports described the semi-final field as tight, with little separating the remaining heavyweights.

What happened:

Watch the highlights:

After 100 matches at the 2026 World Cup, the semi-final lineup is France, Spain, Argentina and England. Yahoo Sports framed the last four as a heavyweight field, noting that all four remaining teams are former champions and that there is little separating them at this stage.

That matters because tournaments often produce at least one surprise semi-finalist, a team whose run changes the bracket’s texture. Based on the source, this edition has instead arrived at a final four loaded with historic weight. The remaining matches are not built around novelty. They are built around elite teams trying to separate themselves from peers.

Why it matters:

The line that “it’s all very tight,” as quoted in the Yahoo summary, is the useful competitive read. With France, Spain, Argentina and England still alive, the semi-finals are less about a clear favourite marching through and more about small margins. Selection decisions, game-state management and moments under pressure are likely to carry the conversation because the source gives no indication that one side has created obvious distance from the others.

The 100-match marker also adds context. This is not an early-tournament snapshot shaped by small samples. The field has been filtered through a long World Cup, and the remaining group is still composed entirely of teams with championship pedigree. That does not guarantee quality in every match, but it does raise the standard for what each side must solve.

Tournament impact:

For fans, the bracket now has a simple shape: two matches away from a champion, with four former winners left. France and Spain are one half of the confirmed semi-final picture from the supplied stories, while Argentina and England complete the group identified by Yahoo. The tournament consequence is straightforward but substantial: whichever team wins from here will have survived a closing stretch with no soft narrative landing.

What to watch:

The key question is whether pedigree translates into control or whether the tightness Yahoo highlights turns the semi-finals into volatility. Former champions can bring experience, but they also bring expectations. In a field this compressed, the team that manages pressure and avoids overreaching may have as much advantage as the team with the sharper headline form.

Confidence:

Confirmed by the source: the World Cup has reached the semi-final stage after 100 matches, France, Spain, Argentina and England are the last teams standing, all four are former champions, and Yahoo Sports describes the race as very tight. Still needing follow-up: the exact semi-final pairings beyond the France-Spain story supplied separately, team news, tactical plans and any match-specific conditions.

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