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Scotland's World Cup Knockout Chances Plummet to 5.26%
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BBC Sport6/26/2026Sports2 min readUnited Kingdom

Scotland's World Cup Knockout Chances Plummet to 5.26%

Quick Look

  • Scotland's hopes of reaching the World Cup knockouts have drastically fallen from 42% to 5.26% due to unfavorable results elsewhere and their own 3-0 loss to Brazil.
  • They now sit eighth among third-placed teams, needing at least four teams to finish with fewer points or a worse goal difference to advance.

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Why It Matters

Scotland's chances of reaching the World Cup knockouts have significantly decreased due to results from other matches and their own performance. They need specific outcomes from other third-placed teams to advance.

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In just over 24 hours, Scotland's chances of reaching the World Cup knockouts for the first time have dropped from 42% to just 5.26%.

They require four teams to finish third in their groups but have a worse record than them - and results elsewhere have not helped Steve Clarke's side's hopes.

Losing 3-0 to Brazil in their final group-stage game dealt a substantial blow to their chances as they only managed to pick up three points from the group stage, whereas four would likely have sent them through.

Worse is the impact of the extent of their defeat. It has left Scotland with a goal difference of -3, which makes it trickier for them to finish with a better record than many other third-placed sides.

First, South Africa beat South Korea 1-0 to snatch one of the top two places in their group, meaning South Korea - who have a better goal difference than Scotland - dropped to third.

After that, Ecuador produced an unexpected 2-1 victory over Germany to finish third in their group with four points and seal a spot in the last 32.

Sweden then held Japan to a 1-1 draw, also qualifying from third place with four points.

Scotland were down to an 6.89% chance of qualification after that, according to Opta, but are now down to 5.49% after Paraguay played out a stalemate with Australia which suited both sides.

Those results leave Scotland sitting eighth out of the 12 current third-placed sides and on the brink of missing out on a knockout spot.

If teams in the third-place standings finish level on points, the rankings are then decided by goal difference.

That means Scotland will need to hope that at least four third-placed teams do not manage to reach three points, or they do so with a worse goal difference than them.

As it stands, there are four teams ranked below Scotland who have only played two matches, while there are two others who are level on points with a game to play.

Open Questions

  • Will Scotland's goal difference be sufficient if teams draw level on points?
  • How many other third-placed teams will fail to reach three points?

Related Topics

This article was originally published by BBC Sport.

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