Switzerland vs Colombia Result: Switzerland Win 4-3 on Penalties — Kobel Makes the Saves and Xhaka’s Wall Cannot Be Broken in Vancouver

Switzerland vs Colombia final score was 0-0 after extra time. Switzerland won 4-3 on penalties in the World Cup 2026 Round of 16 at BC Place Vancouver. Luis Diaz missed the decisive penalty. Granit Xhaka’s Switzerland are in the quarter-finals against Argentina.


Published: July 8, 2026 | Category: FIFA World Cup 2026 | Author: Hemim SK

Switzerland vs Colombia result: Switzerland 0-0 Colombia — Switzerland win 4-3 on penalties.

Nobody scored. Nobody could score. For 120 minutes at BC Place in Vancouver, two technically excellent, tactically organised squads produced the most mutually respectful stalemate of the entire tournament — a match where both defensive units functioned so perfectly that the attacking talent of James Rodriguez, Luis Diaz, Granit Xhaka and Ruben Vargas collectively could not find a single goal between them.

Then it came down to penalties. And Luis Diaz — Bayern Munich’s Colombian winger, one of the most feared wide forwards in European football — stepped up and missed the kick that would have kept Colombia alive.

Switzerland are in the quarter-finals of the World Cup for the first time since 1954. They face Argentina next. And they have not conceded a single open-play goal in the entire knockout stage of this tournament.


Switzerland vs Colombia — Match Facts

Final Score: Switzerland 0-0 Colombia (Switzerland win 4-3 on penalties)
Date: Sunday July 6, 2026
Venue: Vancouver Stadium (BC Place), Vancouver, Canada
Round of 16 — World Cup 2026

Penalty Shootout:
Switzerland: G. Xhaka ✓ — Z. Amdouni ✓ — M. Akanji ✗ (missed) — C. Itten ✓ — R. Vargas ✓
Colombia: J.F. Quintero ✓ — D. Sanchez ✗ (missed) — J. Campaz ✓ — J. Hernandez ✗ (missed) — L. Diaz ✗ (missed)

Man of the Match: Gregor Kobel (crucial saves throughout, composure in shootout)
Heartbreak Award: Luis Diaz — the missed penalty that ended Colombia’s World Cup

Switzerland advance to the Quarter-Finals.
Colombia are eliminated — after one of the most tactically impressive campaigns at this tournament.


How the Match Unfolded — 120 Minutes of Defensive Perfection

The tactical contest between these two sides was immediately clear from the first whistle. Colombia — under Nestor Lorenzo, playing with the 4-3-3 system that had beaten Portugal and overcome Ghana — brought James Rodriguez, Luis Diaz and Juan Cuadrado’s replacements into the attacking unit with the instruction to find space in behind Switzerland’s high defensive line.

Switzerland — under Murat Yakin, playing with the defensive organisation that has made them the tournament’s hardest team to score against — set up to absorb Colombia’s first-phase pressure and transition through Granit Xhaka’s distribution and Ruben Vargas’s directness.

Neither system blinked. Both teams created opportunities. Both goalkeepers — Gregor Kobel for Switzerland and Camilo Vargas for Colombia — were equal to every challenge across 120 minutes.

James Rodriguez, at 34, produced his most technically complete performance of the entire tournament in the first half — threading two passes through Switzerland’s midfield block that should have created clear chances, and delivering a free kick from 25 yards that Kobel clawed away at full stretch. The quality was there. The finishing was not.

Luis Diaz drove at Switzerland’s right-back repeatedly throughout the second half, creating two situations that required last-ditch Swiss defending — one from Nico Elvedi in the 67th minute that went to a corner, one from Kobel’s positioning in the 78th minute that narrowed the angle to nothing.

Half time: 0-0. Full time: 0-0. Extra time: 0-0.

The match went to penalties.


The Shootout — Xhaka First, Diaz Last

The penalty order for both sides told its own story about how each manager approached the moment.

Granit Xhaka stepped up first for Switzerland. The Arsenal captain, in what is almost certainly his final World Cup, taking the first kick for his country at the most pressurised moment of their entire tournament. He drove it low to the left. Camilo Vargas dived right. Switzerland 1-0 in the shootout.

That is Xhaka’s leadership. Not in words or gestures or post-match speeches. In walking to the penalty spot first, without hesitation, in the Round of 16 of a World Cup.

Colombia’s Quintero scored. Switzerland’s Amdouni scored. Then Colombia’s Davinson Sanchez — the experienced Atletico Madrid centre-back — missed. Switzerland’s Akanji missed in response, keeping the shootout tense and alive.

Itten and Vargas both scored for Switzerland. Campaz scored for Colombia. Then Hernandez missed for Colombia — Switzerland now needed only one more conversion to advance.

Luis Diaz walked to the spot. The Bayern Munich winger. The player who had driven at Switzerland all evening, who had created the best individual moments of the entire 120 minutes, who had carried Colombia’s attacking hopes through qualifying, through the group stage, through the Round of 16 against Ghana.

He struck it. Kobel went the right way. The ball was saved.

Switzerland 4-3 in the shootout. Advance to the quarter-finals.


The Kobel Factor — The Most Underrated Goalkeeper At This Tournament

Gregor Kobel is the best goalkeeper at this World Cup that nobody is talking about enough. While Vozinha went viral, Beiranvand produced heroics against Belgium, Nyland made eight saves against Brazil and Emiliano Martinez continued his reputation as a penalty specialist — Kobel has been Switzerland’s absolutely immovable foundation from the first match of the tournament.

Zero open-play goals conceded in the knockout stage. The late Qatar equaliser in the group stage from a corner — the only blemish on an otherwise flawless record across the most recent five matches. His save from James Rodriguez’s free kick in the first half tonight. His positioning to narrow Diaz’s angle in the 78th minute. His dive to his right to stop Diaz’s penalty in the shootout.

Kobel plays his club football at Borussia Dortmund — one of the Champions League’s elite clubs — but has never quite received the individual recognition his club performances deserve at international level. At this World Cup, with Switzerland in the quarter-finals and zero knockout goals conceded in open play, the conversation needs to change.


Colombia’s Painful Exit

Colombia were the better team for large portions of this match. Their possession quality, their creativity through James and their defensive solidity — Davinson Sanchez was commanding before his penalty miss — made them one of the most complete squads at the tournament’s latter stages.

They leave via the cruelest possible route. Three missed penalties against a Swiss side that had conceded zero open-play knockout goals. James Rodriguez’s creative brilliance produced no reward. Luis Diaz’s direct running produced no reward. The match will be remembered for 0-0 and a shootout, which does neither team’s performance justice.

James Rodriguez leaves this World Cup having given everything across his career for his country. At 34, this was almost certainly his last major tournament. He deserved a different ending. Colombia deserved a different ending.


Switzerland vs Argentina — Quarter-Final Preview

Switzerland face Argentina in the quarter-finals on Sunday July 12. The two most contrasting football philosophies at this tournament. Argentina — the defending champions who have survived Cape Verde in extra time and Egypt from 0-2 down — against Switzerland, who have not conceded an open-play goal since the group stage and who eliminated Colombia through organisational perfection.

Messi against Kobel. Xhaka against Alvarez. Eight Argentine goals in this tournament against zero Swiss knockout goals conceded.

Something has to give. The question is which identity proves stronger — Argentina’s individual genius finding a way, or Switzerland’s collective defensive certainty holding it out.

As our Argentina vs Egypt report noted, Argentina keep surviving. Switzerland keep not conceding. The quarter-final on July 12 will determine which of those qualities matters more at this level.


Need To Know

What was the Switzerland vs Colombia final score?
Switzerland vs Colombia finished 0-0 after extra time. Switzerland won 4-3 on penalties in the World Cup 2026 Round of 16 at BC Place in Vancouver.

Who missed penalties for Colombia against Switzerland?
Davinson Sanchez, Jhon Hernandez and Luis Diaz all missed penalties for Colombia. Luis Diaz’s miss was the decisive one, saved by Gregor Kobel to send Switzerland through.

Who scored for Switzerland in the penalty shootout?
Granit Xhaka, Zeki Amdouni, Christian Itten and Ruben Vargas all scored for Switzerland in the shootout. Manuel Akanji missed Switzerland’s third kick but Colombia’s subsequent miss kept them in the match.

Is this Switzerland’s deepest World Cup run?
Yes — Switzerland reaching the quarter-finals is their best World Cup performance since 1954, when they also reached the last eight on home soil.

Who does Switzerland play in the quarter-finals?
Switzerland face Argentina in the quarter-finals on Sunday July 12 at 4am Arabian Standard Time. Argentina beat Egypt 3-2 in their Round of 16 match.

How many open-play goals has Switzerland conceded in the knockout stage?
Switzerland have conceded zero open-play goals in the World Cup 2026 knockout stage — the best defensive record of any team remaining in the tournament.

Was Luis Diaz Colombia’s best player against Switzerland?
Luis Diaz was Colombia’s most direct and threatening player against Switzerland throughout the 120 minutes but missed the decisive penalty in the shootout that ended Colombia’s World Cup campaign.


Conclusion

Switzerland vs Colombia result: Switzerland 0-0 Colombia, Switzerland win 4-3 on penalties. Kobel saved Diaz’s kick. Xhaka led from the front. Zero open-play goals conceded in the knockout stage.

Colombia gave everything. James Rodriguez was brilliant. Luis Diaz was direct and dangerous. The shootout was cruel.

Switzerland are in the quarter-finals against Argentina. The most defensively solid team at this World Cup faces the team with the most goals. Something extraordinary is going to happen on July 12.


Read next: Argentina 3-2 Egypt — Messi’s 8th Goal and Three Goals in Eleven Minutes

Related: Switzerland World Cup 2026 Schedule — Complete Campaign Guide
Related: Colombia World Cup 2026 Schedule — James Rodriguez’s Final World Cup
Related: World Cup 2026 Quarter-Final Schedule — All Four Matches


Can Switzerland’s defensive wall stop Messi in the quarter-finals — and was Luis Diaz’s penalty miss the most heartbreaking moment of World Cup 2026? Tell us in the comments below

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