The 2026 FIFA World Cup has delivered something that sounds like it was scripted by a Hollywood writer with zero imagination: the four best teams in the world, according to FIFA’s own ranking system, are the last four standing. France, Argentina, Spain, and England will contest the semifinals on July 14 and 15, marking the first time since FIFA introduced its ranking system in 1992 that the top four seeds have all advanced to the final four.
The matchups and what got us here
France, currently sitting at number one in the FIFA/Coca-Cola Men’s World Ranking, will face third-ranked Spain in Dallas on July 14. The following day, fourth-ranked England takes on second-ranked Argentina in Atlanta.
All four teams won their quarterfinal matches to reach this stage. The tournament format for this expanded World Cup, jointly hosted by Canada, Mexico, and the United States, was deliberately structured to keep the top four seeds separated until the semifinals. Think of it like the NCAA bracket seeding system: the number one and number four seeds end up on one side, two and three on the other, ensuring the highest-ranked teams can only meet in the final four.
That structure guaranteed the possibility of this outcome. What it didn’t guarantee was that all four top seeds would actually survive that long. In recent World Cup history, at least one heavily favored team has typically exited early. Germany, ranked number one heading into the 2018 tournament, was eliminated in the group stage. In 2022, Belgium entered as the second-ranked team and didn’t make it out of their group either.













