The 2026 FIFA World Cup group stage just wrapped up, and the numbers are staggering. A total of 215 goals were scored across the group phase, a figure that obliterates every previous World Cup record and reflects the reality of a tournament that, for the first time, featured 48 national teams.
With that many goals flying around, some teams were bound to be on the wrong end of the scoreline. The claim circulating on social media is that five national teams conceded 10 or more goals during the group stage alone. Here’s the thing: verified data supporting that specific claim remains elusive, and the actual defensive picture from the tournament tells a more nuanced story.
A tournament of extremes
The 215-goal haul across the group stage represents a massive leap from previous tournaments. For context, the 2022 World Cup in Qatar, which featured 32 teams, produced 120 goals across its entire group stage. The 2026 edition nearly doubled that figure.
But the high-scoring nature of the tournament didn’t mean every defense crumbled. Mexico and Spain both navigated their three group matches without conceding a single goal. Argentina and Ghana also posted clean sheets during the group stage.














