SPAIN · WORLD CUP
Key Facts
—World Cup 2026 Spain: La Roja beat Saudi Arabia 4-0 in Atlanta to go top of Group H.
—Scorers: Lamine Yamal, a Mikel Oyarzabal double and a Hassan Al-Tambakti own goal.
—Yamal: The 18-year-old scored his first World Cup goal on his first start.
—Bounce-back: Spain had opened with a goalless draw against Cape Verde.
—Group H: Spain lead the section; Saudi Arabia drop to the bottom.
A week after being held by debutants Cape Verde, the European champions answered with a ruthless first-half blitz — and a teenager announcing himself on the world stage.
World Cup 2026 Spain roar back against Saudi Arabia
Spain produced the statement performance they badly needed, thrashing Saudi Arabia 4-0 at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta. The win sends the European champions top of Group H.
It was a sharp contrast to their opener, a frustrating goalless draw with Cape Verde. Here, La Roja were clinical from the start and the contest was effectively over by half-time.
Playing their second group game, Spain led inside the opening quarter of an hour and never looked back. Brazilian referee Raphael Claus took charge of a contest that rarely threatened to get away from the favourites.
The result matters well beyond Spain, too. It reshapes a Group H that also contains Uruguay, who Spain meet on the final matchday in Guadalajara.
Yamal’s first World Cup goal
Handed his first start of the tournament, Lamine Yamal needed only 11 minutes to make his mark. He arrived at the back post to convert a Mikel Oyarzabal cross for his first World Cup goal.
At 18, the Barcelona winger is one of the youngest players to score at this World Cup. He was withdrawn at half-time, with the game won and the coaching staff seeing no reason to risk him.
The goal also underlined why Spain have built so much of their attack around him. On this evidence, his movement and finishing give the European champions an edge few rivals can match.
Oyarzabal’s quickfire double
Mikel Oyarzabal then took over in the space of three first-half minutes. He poked home from a scrappy corner on 21 minutes, before turning in a close-range finish on 24 to make it three.
The fourth arrived early in the second half and was unfortunate for the Saudis. A Marc Cucurella effort from a corner was parried by Mohammed Al-Owais, only to rebound in off Hassan Al-Tambakti.
Spain thought they had a fifth in stoppage time through Ferran Torres, but it was ruled out for offside after a video review. By then the margin was academic.
The numbers behind the turnaround
The scale of Spain’s dominance is clear in the data. According to FIFA’s official match statistics, La Roja held 67% possession and out-shot Saudi Arabia 8-1 on target, for an expected-goals figure of about 2.78 to 0.14.
By The Rio Times’ reading of those numbers, the story is as much about ruthlessness as control. Spain had taken 27 shots without scoring against Cape Verde; here they needed only a fraction of that volume to score four.
It suggests the finishing problem that dogged their opener was a blip rather than a trend. For a side built on possession, converting that territory into goals was the missing piece.
The expected-goals gap is among the widest of the group stage so far. It captures a night when Saudi Arabia barely tested the Spanish goalkeeper at the other end.
Group H and what comes next
Victory lifts Spain to the top of Group H, with Saudi Arabia sliding to the bottom. The Saudis now need a heavy win over Cape Verde on the final day to keep their hopes alive.
Spain close their group against Uruguay in Guadalajara on June 26. That fixture could decide who wins the group and who faces a tougher knockout draw.
Cape Verde, the group’s debutants, remain in contention after holding Spain. The final round of fixtures should settle a section that is still wide open below the leaders.
Why it matters
As reigning European champions, Spain arrived among the favourites, and the Cape Verde draw had invited early doubts. This response will reassure a side that expects to contend for the title.
For the Latin American teams in their path, a confident Spain is an ominous sign. Uruguay, in particular, now know exactly what awaits them in Guadalajara.
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the score in World Cup 2026 Spain vs Saudi Arabia?
Spain won 4-0 in Atlanta. Lamine Yamal, Mikel Oyarzabal (twice) and an own goal sealed it.
Why was Lamine Yamal’s goal notable?
It was the 18-year-old’s first World Cup goal, scored on his first start of the tournament. He is among the youngest scorers at this World Cup.
Why had Spain struggled before this?
Spain were held to a 0-0 draw by debutants Cape Verde in their opener despite taking 27 shots. The win over Saudi Arabia ended that goal drought emphatically.
What are the Group H standings?
Spain lead Group H after the win, with Saudi Arabia bottom. Uruguay and Cape Verde sit in between heading into the final round.
Who do Spain play next?
Spain face Uruguay in Guadalajara on June 26 in their final group game. The result could decide top spot in Group H.
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