FIFA WC 2026: Algeria beat Jordan 2-1 to stay alive in Group J
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
Algeria staged a second-half comeback to defeat Jordan 2-1 in a Group J fixture at the San Francisco Bay Area Stadium in Santa Clara on 23 June, keeping their FIFA World Cup 2026 knockout-stage hopes firmly intact. Jordan, who had taken an early lead, are now eliminated from the tournament following the defeat.
How the Goals Fell
Jordan broke the deadlock in the 36th minute through Nizar Al Rashdan, who swept home with the outside of his right boot after Mousa Al Tamari miscued a cross that sliced perfectly into his path. The goal made Algeria the 44th nation to score at the FIFA World Cup 2026 — though it was Jordan who drew first blood.
Algeria regrouped after the interval and pinned Jordan back for a sustained spell. Nadhir Benbouali headed the equaliser in the 69th minute from a well-worked corner. Amine Gouiri then completed the turnaround with eight minutes remaining, tucking in from close range after the ball fell to him at another set piece.
Set Pieces Decide the Contest
Both of Algeria's goals arrived from corners, underlining the decisive role of dead-ball situations in a match that offered few clear chances in open play. Neither side was able to create meaningful openings in the early exchanges, with Algeria described as the more proactive of the two but unable to capitalise until the second half.
Group J Picture
Argentina are now confirmed as Group J winners following this result. Algeria's victory keeps them in contention for a knockout berth, while Jordan's elimination ends their World Cup campaign. The result reshapes the group's second qualifying spot with Algeria now in the frame.
Algeria's World Cup Record
Notably, Algeria have kept only one clean sheet in their last 15 FIFA World Cup matches — a 0-0 draw against England at the 2010 World Cup. The pattern of conceding while still finding a way to win underscores a resilient but defensively vulnerable side. This is the kind of performance that could define their tournament run — or expose them against stronger opposition in the knockouts.