England vs France is Saturday in Miami — the World Cup 2026 bronze is on the line
England and France meet in the World Cup 2026 third-place match on Saturday 18 July at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami, 5pm local time (10pm in Portugal). Here's what's at stake.
Nobody grows up dreaming of the third-place match, but there are worse ways to end a World Cup than England vs France in a Miami stadium. The two sides that left the semi-finals heartbroken get one more night to make a month of work mean something — and to decide who climbs onto the podium.
When is the England vs France third-place match?
This Saturday, 18 July, at 5pm local time — 10pm in Portugal — at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, which waves goodbye to the World Cup with this fixture. It’s the eve of the big one: Spain vs Argentina contest the final on Sunday in New Jersey, and our guide to watching the games in Portugal still applies this weekend.
How did England and France end up here?
Through the most painful door. England fell at the death, losing 2-1 to Argentina to two stoppage-time goals when the final already felt within touching distance. France ran into Spain and lost 2-0 without ever really threatening. What’s left is two squads full of talent and empty of any desire to be there — the classic cocktail for these games, which tend to produce goals precisely because nobody has much left to lose.
Does third place actually matter?
More than it looks. For England, bronze would be their best World Cup finish since 1966 — their only previous third-place match was in 1990, and they lost it. For France, it’s a chance to close a cycle of finals and semi-finals with one more podium. And for the players there’s prize money, ranking points and that old-fashioned thing called pride. The official match page is on FIFA’s site if you want the details.
One for the stats lovers: the bronze match gets settled on the night, no replays, no second chances. On Saturday someone leaves Miami with a medal. On Sunday we find out who leaves New Jersey with the trophy.
By Vasco Almada
Image: VJPannozzo / Wikimedia Commons (CC BY-SA 4.0)