Spain crushed Austria 3-0 in the FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 at SoFi Stadium in Los Angeles, with Mikel Oyarzabal scoring a brace and Pedro Porro heading his first international goal. Lamine Yamal set a 60-year record and Unai Simon broke a 36-year World Cup clean sheet record. Full match report
FIFA World Cup 2026 | Round of 32 | Author: Hemim Sk | SoFi Stadium (Los Angeles Stadium), Inglewood, California
Spain 3–0 Austria
Goals: M. Oyarzabal 36′, 89′ | P. Porro 66′
Match played July 2, 2026 at SoFi Stadium, Inglewood, California.
Spain head coach Luis de la Fuente used the phrase “almost perfect” afterward. He was being modest.
This was Spain at their clinical, ruthless, suffocating best — a performance that dismantled Austria without ever really breaking sweat, answered every question about their knockout-stage credentials, and sent a message so clear it should make the other half of the draw uncomfortable.
Austria managed zero shots on target. Zero. In a World Cup knockout match, against one of the finest defensive structures in world football, Ralf Rangnick’s side couldn’t force a single save from Unai Simón in 90 minutes. The last time a team did that in a World Cup knockout game was Germany in the 2014 final against Argentina. The standard of this Spain performance was that high.
Lamine Yamal Sets the Tone in Minute One
Before the stadium had fully settled, Lamine Yamal was already causing chaos. In the opening minute — literally the first minute — the 18-year-old Barcelona forward picked up the ball at the edge of the area, spun his marker and fired a shot that Schlager did well to hold. A statement of intent delivered before most fans had found their seats.
That opening caused an extraordinary piece of social media activity. Within an hour of the match beginning, the statistic was confirmed and circulating widely: Yamal had become the youngest player since 1966 to record both 10+ touches in the opposition box (14 for the match) and 10+ dribbles (10 completed) in a single FIFA World Cup match. At 18 years old, in a knockout game, he was producing numbers nobody has managed in six decades of World Cup football.
And all of it without scoring. The assists, the dribbles, the danger — it arrived as a constant wave that Austria simply could not contain, and his direct contribution to both the second and third goals underlined that his stat line alone doesn’t capture the full picture.
Oyarzabal Breaks the Deadlock (36′)
Spain had been dominant without breaking through — Marc Cucurella thought he had scored from a corner, wheeled away in celebration and was denied by a soft foul call on Schlager that infuriated La Roja — until the 36th minute delivered the moment of quality the game had been building toward.
Cucurella, relentless down the left all afternoon, played a low ball into the box. Mikel Oyarzabal met it with a first-time finish steered precisely into the corner. Spain 1-0 Austria, half-time approaching, and the task already looking enormous for Rangnick’s side.
It was Oyarzabal’s third goal of this World Cup, making him Spain’s top scorer at the tournament and confirming him as the decisive attacking force in a side that doesn’t always produce an obvious individual star.
Austria’s Brief Resistance Ends With Porro’s Header (66′)
Rangnick threw on substitutes at half-time, including Sasa Kalajdzic — the stoppage-time hero whose goal against Algeria had dragged Austria into the knockout rounds in the first place. For a brief second-half spell, Austria pushed and probed, with Stefan Posch heading over from a Sabitzer cross that deserved better.
But Spain’s defensive structure absorbed every Austrian attack without the slightest alarm. Pau Cubarsí and Aymeric Laporte were imperious. Rodri and Pedri controlled tempo so completely that moments of genuine Austrian threat were almost non-existent.
The second goal arrived in the 66th minute and effectively ended the contest. Álex Baena swung a cross from the left and Pedro Porro, arriving late at the far post, nodded in with precision. It was Porro’s first-ever goal for Spain in his 20th international appearance — and coming on the biggest stage of his career, in Los Angeles, in a World Cup knockout match, it will remain one of his defining moments in football.
David Alaba blocked a Yamal effort on the goal line shortly after — the outstanding individual intervention of the match — but it was the intervention of a desperate side rather than a dominant one.
Oyarzabal Seals It in Style (89′)
In the 89th minute, Cucurella delivered again from the left. Oyarzabal met it with a clinical slide and Spain were 3-0 up with minutes to spare. The brace made Oyarzabal the first Spain player to score twice in a World Cup knockout match since Emilio Butragueño against Denmark at Mexico 1986 — a 40-year wait for a Spaniard to produce that on that stage.
De la Fuente was ecstatic on the touchline. Spain’s players celebrated with the knowledge that the performance had matched the scoreline. “We have to live up to high expectations,” the coach said afterward. “We knew it would be an important match. In every aspect, we were almost perfect.”
Unai Simón’s Record Nobody Saw Coming
In the middle of Spain’s attacking brilliance, their goalkeeper quietly made history.
With Austria failing to register a single shot on target, Simón extended his run without conceding in World Cup football to 519 minutes — breaking Walter Zenga’s all-time record of 517 minutes, set with Italy during the 1990 World Cup. That run stretches back to a 0-0 draw with Morocco in Qatar in December 2022, through Spain’s entire 2026 group stage campaign (four group matches without conceding a goal) and now into the knockout rounds.
Spain have not conceded a goal at this World Cup. Five matches. Zero goals against. And they didn’t allow a single shot on target against Austria — the first time any team has managed that in a World Cup knockout match since Germany in the 2014 final.
Match Stats
| Spain 🇪🇸 | Austria 🇦🇹 | |
|---|---|---|
| Goals | 3 (Oyarzabal x2, Porro) | 0 |
| Shots on Target | Multiple | 0 |
| Unai Simón WC minutes without conceding | 519 (World record) | — |
| Yamal dribbles completed | 10 | — |
| Yamal box touches | 14 | — |
| Spain unbeaten run (competitive) | 34 matches | — |
Round of 16: Spain vs Portugal or Croatia — Dallas, Monday July 6
Spain will face the winner of Thursday night’s Portugal vs Croatia Round of 32 match in Dallas on Monday, July 6. It is a fixture that feels enormous regardless of who emerges from Toronto.
Portugal, with Ronaldo, Leão, Bruno Fernandes and Pedro Neto, carry the more individually gifted attack. Croatia, with Modric conducting from midfield at 40 years old, carry the tournament pedigree and the psychological resilience of a side that has reached the semi-finals and final in the last two editions.
Either way, Spain will be favourites. They are the reigning European champions, 34 competitive matches unbeaten, yet to concede a goal at this World Cup, and producing a performance level that now legitimately places them among the short-price favourites to win the entire tournament.
Luis de la Fuente’s side didn’t just beat Austria. They sent a warning to everyone still left standing.
NEED TO KNOW
Q: What was the score in Spain vs Austria?
A: Spain 3-0 Austria. Goals from Mikel Oyarzabal (36′, 89′) and Pedro Porro (66′).
Q: Who scored for Spain against Austria?
A: Mikel Oyarzabal with a brace (36′ and 89′) and Pedro Porro with a header (66′) — his first international goal in his 20th cap.
Q: Did Lamine Yamal score?
A: No, but he was the game’s outstanding creative force — recording 10 completed dribbles and 14 touches in the opposition box, the most by any player in a World Cup match since 1966.
Q: What record did Unai Simón break?
A: He extended his World Cup run without conceding to 519 minutes, breaking Italy’s Walter Zenga who held the previous record of 517 minutes since 1990.
Q: Who do Spain play in the Round of 16?
A: The winner of Portugal vs Croatia, on Monday July 6 in Dallas.
Q: When was Spain’s last World Cup knockout win before this?
A: Their 2010 World Cup triumph in South Africa — making this their first knockout win since lifting the trophy 16 years ago.
Q: Is Spain the favourite to win the 2026 World Cup?
A: Based on their performances so far — unbeaten in 34 competitive matches, zero goals conceded at this tournament, and a squad with elite depth throughout — they are among the clear tournament favourites alongside France and Argentina.