Hello and welcome to Daily Mail Sport's World Cup Breakfast from day 22 at the tournament - your one-stop shop for everything you've missed overnight in North America.For all the latest news, viral moments and what to look out for, stay right here.OVERNIGHT ACTIONSwitzerland 2-0 AlgeriaSwitzerland won their first World Cup knockout game for a staggering 88 years. The 20-year-old Johan Manzambi again lit up a match in this tournament, with the Newcastle-linked rising star producing a sensational run to tee up Breel Embolo's opening goal just 10 minutes in. They then landed the killer blow on Algeria 48 seconds after half-time when Leeds star Dan Ndoye took advantage of dreadful defending to slot home. Vladimir Petkovic then held their opponents at a distance to see out a thoroughly professional win. Switzerland will remain in Vancouver for the third successive game and face a winnable tie against either Colombia or Ghana in the last 16.

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The 20-year-old Swiss star Johan Manzambi (right) again impressed for his countryPortugal 2-1 CroatiaA forgettable first half was followed by a second 45 full of chaos, drama and heartbreak as Portugal progressed to the last 16.Ivan Perisic put Croatia in front shortly after the restart before Cristiano Ronaldo - who was later substituted - finally scored his first World Cup knockout goal from the penalty spot following a VAR intervention.It was far from the last involvement from the VAR, however. Goncalo Ramos netted a superb header in stoppage time but Croatia thought they had forced another 30 minutes as the clock struck 103 when Josko Gvardiol steered home at the back post, only for the referee to be sent to the monitor because of a possible offside.Espen Eskas then confirmed Luka Modric and Co's worst nightmare. Mario Pasalic was adjudged to have got a touch on the ball by the new 'Snicko' technology while in an offside position before Gvardiol's finish and the goal was ruled out, breaking their hearts and sending Ronaldo's men through to a crunch last-16 clash with Spain.The Snickometer, more commonly used in sports like cricket, detects any motion or impact to judge contact on the Adidas Trionda ball which has a microchip that feeds information back to the VAR booth. FIFA have been using it since 2022.READ LEWIS STEELE'S VERDICT HERE