Europe at the World Cup: Germany's 7-goal statement, Scotland's 36-year wait ends, and a chaotic transfer window opens

Europe at the World Cup: Germany's 7-goal statement, Scotland's 36-year wait ends, and a chaotic transfer window opens

Germany became the all-time World Cup top scorer (239 goals) with a 7-1 demolition of debutants Curaçao — echoing 2014's Brazil semi-final — while Scotland ended a 36-year win drought and Sweden's Isak–Gyökeres combination destroyed Tunisia 5-1. The Netherlands were held 2-2 by Japan in the week's best match. On the same Monday the tournament settled in, the Premier League transfer window opened: Real Madrid confirmed Marc Cucurella for £51.8m and moved towards Konaté, Dumfries, and Bernardo Silva; Manchester United's Éderson underwent his medical in New York; and Barcelona's option to permanently sign Marcus Rashford expired without being exercised.

Premier League / Champions League Roundup
2026. 6. 15. · 22:08
구독 1개 · 콘텐츠 5개
No Premier League. No La Liga. No Champions League finals to digest. This week the story moved to North America, where the 2026 FIFA World Cup (48 teams, 16 European nations qualified, Italy absent) kicked off on June 11 and European sides played their Group Stage openers through June 14. Meanwhile, the Premier League transfer window opened Monday June 15 — and Real Madrid, not a Premier League club, made the biggest early move.

World Cup Group Stage: European results, June 11–14

Germany 7-1 Curaçao — Group E, June 14, Houston

Germany's opening statement was the kind that gets filed away for decades. Six different scorers, a final scoreline that echoes 2014's 7-1 semi-final demolition of Brazil, and a record that Germany can now claim outright: 239 World Cup goals in total, one more than Brazil's 238. 1
The goals: Felix Nmecha opened in the 6th minute with a curling finish from a Florian Wirtz assist. Curaçao equalized through Livano Comenencia (21') — a deflected drive that became the debutant nation's first-ever World Cup goal, celebrated wildly by ~158,000-population Curaçao's supporters inside NRG Stadium. 1 Nico Schlotterbeck (40') headed Germany back ahead. Kai Havertz converted a penalty on the stroke of half-time and added a late eighth goal (88'). Jamal Musiala scored 69 seconds after the restart (46'). Nathaniel Brown (64') and Deniz Undav (70') completed the rout — Undav, on as a substitute in the 64th minute, finished with one goal and two assists in 26 minutes. 1
It is only the fifth World Cup match this century in which one team has scored seven or more goals, and Germany account for three of them: 8-0 vs Saudi Arabia in 2002, 7-1 vs Brazil in 2014, and now this. 2 Nmecha and Schlotterbeck became only the second pair of Borussia Dortmund teammates to score for the same side in a World Cup match — the first was Jan Koller and Tomáš Rosický for Czech Republic against the USA in 2006. 3 Manuel Neuer, at 40 years and 79 days, became Germany's oldest player to appear at a major tournament. 2
Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann was measured in victory: "A lot of shots were blocked by a lot of players in the penalty area. If we'd had a bit more luck, we would have been leading 2-0 or even 3-0. We did really well." 4 Curaçao's coach Dick Advocaat — at 78 years and 260 days, the oldest coach in World Cup history — kept perspective: "Despite this 7-1 outcome, the joy of the fans is fantastic. This is not a disgrace, we can still be proud. We still have two games to go and those could end differently." 1
The caveat from analysts: Bavarian Football Works noted that Nagelsmann's asymmetrical system left "acres and acres of space" at the back — Curaçao had 0.40 xG, not zero — and that Leroy Sané "showed every single one of his weaknesses." Ivory Coast and Ecuador in Group E are a different challenge. 4

Sweden 5-1 Tunisia — Group F, June 14–15, Monterrey

Yasin Ayari (Brighton midfielder, 21) scored twice — a 7th-minute curling strike he refused to celebrate (his father is Tunisian) and a 90th-minute lash from distance — to bookend Sweden's demolition. 5 In between: Alexander Isak (Liverpool, 30') with a thumping finish, Viktor Gyökeres (Arsenal, 60') after an Isak assist, and Mattias Svanberg (84') — who scored 18 seconds after coming on, the second-fastest substitute goal at a World Cup since 1966, per OptaJoe. 6 VAR's 'snickometer' technology confirmed Isak got a slight touch to keep Svanberg onside for that goal. Omar Rekik (Tunisia) headed one back at 42'.
Gyökeres now has six goals in four games for Sweden in 2026, more than any other European player for their national team this calendar year. 7 Sweden coach Graham Potter (the former Chelsea and Brighton manager): "Fantastic. Great goals, five goals, solid and we could have scored more. It was brilliant, full credit to the players." 5 Tunisia fired coach Sabri Lamouchi immediately after the match, the tournament's first managerial casualty.
Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyökeres celebrate Sweden's goals against Tunisia
Isak (1 goal, 2 assists) and Gyökeres formed the week's most productive club-colleagues attacking partnership. 5

Netherlands 2-2 Japan — Group F, June 14, Dallas

The match widely crowned the week's best drew four second-half goals at AT&T Stadium, Dallas. Virgil van Dijk (Liverpool captain, 51') headed the Dutch ahead from a Ryan Gravenberch cross. Japan equalized through Keito Nakamura (57'). Crysencio Summerville (West Ham, 64') cut inside for a low curling restoration of the Dutch lead. Daichi Kamada (Crystal Palace, 88') deflected Koki Ogawa's effort with a glancing header to deny the Dutch a win they had twice appeared to have secured — the first time in World Cup history the Netherlands failed to win after leading twice. 8
The Dutch starting XI contained eight Premier League players, including Van Dijk, Gravenberch, and Cody Gakpo (all Liverpool), Summerville (West Ham), plus Bart Verbruggen, Micky van de Ven, Denzel Dumfries, and Nathan Aké. 8 BBC pundit Paul Robinson: "Netherlands thought they were good enough defensively but they were submissive and invited Japan onto them. Japan have done it again." 8

Scotland 1-0 Haiti — Group C, June 14, Boston (Foxboro)

John McGinn (Aston Villa, ~70') scored with a deflected shot to give Scotland their first World Cup win in 36 years — their previous victory was at the 1990 tournament in Italy. 9 It was only Scotland's fourth clean sheet in World Cup history. McGinn, at 31 years and 238 days, became Scotland's oldest World Cup goalscorer, passing Kenny Dalglish. 2 He also drew level with Denis Law on 21 goals scored under manager Steve Clarke — the most any player has scored for Scotland under a single manager. 2
Captain Andy Robertson: "What an amazing feeling. The lads achieved their dreams today. It was such a long day waiting, I can't imagine what the fans back home were like staying up so late." 9 There is a caveat for Scotland fans: Haiti actually led on xG after the goal (1.21 vs 1.07) and on possession (54%). BBC pundit Pat Nevin admitted "we will not play that system again in this World Cup" — but the three points are all that matters.
John McGinn celebrates scoring Scotland's winner against Haiti
McGinn's deflected 70th-minute winner was Scotland's first World Cup victory in 36 years. 9

Other European results

Czech Republic 1-2 South Korea (Group A, June 12, Guadalajara): Ladislav Krejci headed Czech Republic ahead from Vladimír Coufal's (West Ham) long throw. South Korea levelled through Hwang In-beom (Feyenoord, 67') after a 25-pass build-up, then Oh Hyeon-gyu (World Cup debut, 80') tapped in the winner. Tomáš Souček (West Ham) had a goal disallowed for offside. Czech Republic bottom Group A. 10
Bosnia-Herzegovina 1-1 Canada (Group B, June 12, Toronto): Jovo Lukic headed Bosnia ahead (21'), flicked on by Sead Kolasinac (ex-Arsenal). Southampton's Cyle Larin equalized for Canada (78') — 121 seconds after coming on as a substitute. Former keeper Asmir Begovic on BBC radio: "It's a good point for Bosnia. Not easy to come into this sort of environment, the sea of red in Toronto, everyone backing Canada." 11
Switzerland 1-1 Qatar (Group B, June 13, San Francisco Bay Area): Breel Embolo scored from the spot after Remo Freuler was fouled — TV replays suggested Freuler may have been offside in the build-up, but FIFA did not release VAR images. 12 Switzerland generated 26 shots (xG 3.24 vs Qatar's 0.76) and squandered gilt-edged chances from Nottingham Forest forward Dan Ndoye, Ruben Vargas, and Embolo himself. Boualem Khoukhi headed a 94th-minute equalizer to give Qatar their first-ever World Cup point. Gary Neville on ITV asked directly why conclusive VAR evidence of the possible offside in the build-up was never shown. 12
Turkey 0-2 Australia (Group D, June 13, Vancouver): Nestory Irankunda (Watford, 20 years and 125 days) became Australia's youngest World Cup goalscorer with a first-half opener. Connor Metcalfe added the second. Arda Güler (Real Madrid) was rated 5.19 by BBC users; Hakan Çalhanoğlu 4.96. Turkey's first tournament since 2002 started with a loss despite dominating possession and attempts. 13

Premier League transfer window: Day 1, June 15

Real Madrid lead with Cucurella confirmed

Marc Cucurella (27, left-back) officially joined Real Madrid from Chelsea on Monday morning. The fee is £51.8m (£47.5m fixed + £4.3m in performance-related add-ons), with a six-year contract. 14 Cucurella joined Chelsea from Brighton in 2022 for £63m. He had three years remaining on his Chelsea contract but criticized the club's hierarchy after Enzo Maresca left in January, reportedly accelerating his exit. He is currently with Spain's World Cup squad.
The Cucurella deal is the most visible confirmed piece of José Mourinho's first transfer window in charge at the Bernabéu. Real are also reportedly close on Ibrahima Konaté (27, centre-back, free from Liverpool — per RMC Sport and beIN SPORTS, his contract until 2030 is reportedly already signed) 15 and Denzel Dumfries (30, right-back, Inter Milan — €20m release clause reportedly activated, four-year deal per Fabrizio Romano and ANSA). 15 Bernardo Silva is reportedly set to join from Manchester City as a free agent (Football España). 16 A €150m bid for Julián Álvarez was rejected by Atlético Madrid. 14
The Konaté, Dumfries, and Silva moves remain at the reported/reportedly-agreed stage — none had official announcements as of Monday afternoon.

Manchester United: Éderson medical in New York

Brazilian midfielder Éderson (26, Atalanta) underwent his Manchester United medical in New York on Monday, where he is based with Brazil's World Cup squad following a late call-up to replace the injured Wesley. 17 The agreed fee is €40.5m (£34.9m) fixed plus €4.5m (£3.8m) in bonuses, on a four-year contract with an additional option year. 17 Éderson started in Brazil's opening 1-1 draw with Morocco at the World Cup. An official announcement is expected this week.
Marcus Rashford: Barcelona's option to permanently purchase Rashford — written into the loan agreement that saw him join the Catalan club for the 2025-26 season — expired Monday June 15. As of early afternoon BST, Barcelona had not exercised it. Rashford returns to Manchester United. 18
Enzo Maresca at Manchester City: Negotiations between City and Chelsea over compensation for the 46-year-old manager — who left Stamford Bridge in January 2026 despite a contract running to 2029 — continued Monday with no official announcement. Per BBC Sport, senior figures at both clubs are discussing a compensation package; Chelsea have been exploring their legal options. Maresca was Guardiola's assistant during City's Treble-winning 2022-23 season. 19
Liverpool are reported to have signed French centre-back Jérémy Jacquet (20, from Rennes) for around £55m — ESPN and the Evening Standard list the deal as confirmed; Sky Sports' tracker does not. 20 The bigger question around Anfield is Andoni Iraola's window overall: Mohamed Salah left on a mutual termination, Andrew Robertson joined Tottenham on a free, and Konaté has reportedly headed to Real Madrid — leaving three significant positions to fill.

PL Day 1 confirmed transfers

ClubInsOuts
Real MadridCucurella (Chelsea, £51.8m)
NewcastleAnthony Gordon (Barcelona, £60.5–69.3m, fee disputed)
Man UnitedÉderson (Atalanta, £34.9m, medical only)Højlund (Napoli, ~£38m); Casemiro, Malacia, Sancho (all released)
TottenhamRobertson (Liverpool, free), Senesi (Bournemouth, free)Bissouma (released)
ChelseaQuenda (Sporting CP), Denner (Corinthians), Emegha (Strasbourg)Cucurella (Real Madrid, £51.8m)
LiverpoolJacquet (Rennes, ~£55m, reported not universally confirmed)Salah (mutual termination), Robertson (Spurs, free), Konaté (reportedly Real Madrid)
Twelve of 20 Premier League clubs had no confirmed incoming signings on Day 1, including Arsenal, Manchester City, Aston Villa, and all three newly promoted sides. 20 21

Squad narratives and injuries

Spain (opener vs Cape Verde, June 15, Atlanta): Both Lamine Yamal (18, Barcelona) and Nico Williams (23, Athletic Club) are available but cannot play 90 minutes. Yamal has not played since injuring his left hamstring against Celta Vigo on April 22; Williams also suffered a hamstring injury late in the domestic season. Both returned to full training at Spain's Chattanooga base camp on June 11. Coach Luis de la Fuente at his pre-match press conference: "Lamine is in perfect condition. He has trained excellently and we have all players available." On playing time: "He is not in a position to play the full 90 minutes, but he can participate if we feel it's needed." 22 The expectation before this week had been that Yamal might miss the opener entirely — his presence on the bench represents an accelerated recovery.
Lamine Yamal and Nico Williams at Spain's training camp in Chattanooga
Both attacking wide players returned to full training on June 11, but neither will start the opener. 22
England (opener vs Croatia, June 17, Kansas City): Jordan Henderson (35, Brentford) defended Jude Bellingham (22, Real Madrid) against a week of critical coverage: "I honestly couldn't speak highly enough of him... What he gives us is just something really special. He really gives us an X-factor in our team." 23 Thomas Tuchel has been building Arsenal-style set-piece routines with Declan Rice's corners and Reece James's dead-ball delivery — Arsenal scored 19 goals from corners in the Premier League last season. 24 John Stones (32, 89 caps) almost retired in October 2025 after injuries limited him to 439 Premier League minutes in 2025-26, yet Tuchel selected him ahead of Harry Maguire and Levi Colwill. Stones: "I really had to dig deep and I am proud of myself for being so mentally strong throughout." 25 Bukayo Saka (Arsenal) is managing Achilles tendonitis; Tuchel says he is "building him up" for Croatia. 26
Key injuries confirmed out: Billy Gilmour (Scotland, Napoli) — knee injury in warm-up win vs Curaçao; Scott McTominay said he was "absolutely devastated." 26 Jurrien Timber (Netherlands, Arsenal) — groin strain, left squad. Xavi Simons (Netherlands, Tottenham) — torn ACL, ruled out. Fermín López (Spain, Barcelona) — metatarsal fracture, out. William Saliba (France) — returned to full group training June 13 after back pain; Deschamps downplayed severity.
Eriksen update: Christian Eriksen (34, Wolfsburg) collapsed during Denmark's friendly vs Ukraine in Odense on June 7. His ICD (implantable cardioverter defibrillator, fitted after his cardiac arrest at Euro 2020) activated and restored his heart rhythm; he walked to the ambulance himself. He was discharged on June 8 and posted on Instagram: "Thanks to their expertise, my ICD did exactly what it was designed to do: protect me when I needed it." 27 Denmark did not qualify for the 2026 World Cup. No retirement decision has been announced. Prof Rachel Lampert (Yale School of Medicine) noted that "shocks can happen at any time" and that his doctors will need to understand why his heart rhythm changed. 28

Fan discourse highlights

The week's most-upvoted post on r/soccer was not a match thread. A Daily Mail opinion piece by Riath Al-Samarrai — arguing that FIFA's mandatory hydration breaks are a commercial cash-grab, with ad breaks inserted during stoppages while fans in air-conditioned stadiums wait — received 11,939 upvotes (98.2% ratio, 592 comments). 29 Virgil van Dijk then added player weight to the criticism, saying publicly he is not a fan and calling for "reflection on whether they're really necessary." 30
The Netherlands-Japan match generated the most engagement of any European team's game this window: 744 upvotes and 1,241 comments on the post-match thread (99.1% upvote ratio). An attendee, u/Hurtbig, reported: "The atmosphere pregame was electric. Japan supporters never let up all game. Fans from both sides were friendly. Man, what a game." 31 The Japanese emperor Naruhito and King Willem-Alexander of the Netherlands were photographed watching together in the stands. Japanese fans — who stayed to clean up the stadium afterwards — were widely praised across social media.
Germany's 7-1 drew the expected "Wow it happened again" reaction on r/soccer (referencing 2014), but the Curaçao supporters' response arguably resonated more: a separate post of Curaçao players showing love to their fans after the defeat drew 3,037 upvotes (99.4% ratio). 32 A post noting that through the first five matches involving European nations, the continent had won just once (Scotland over Haiti) drew 3,377 upvotes — more than any individual match thread from that stretch. Germany and Sweden subsequently improved the record, but the "European underperformance" narrative had already lodged. 33
On the VAR front: FIFA is investigating after Australian official Shaun Evans made an "upside-down OK" hand gesture during the pre-match broadcast segment before Germany-Curaçao. The Fare network (FIFA's anti-discrimination partner) described it as clearly resembling a symbol used in far-right circles. 34 FIFA changed its pre-match VAR presentation format in the three matches that followed.

Cover image: FIFA World Cup 2026, opening week. AI-generated image.

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