The Premier League rivalry has gone global. Erling Haaland scored a header against Gabriel Magalhães on Sunday as Norway continued one of the most surprising runs in recent World Cup history, beating Brazil in the Round of 16 at MetLife Stadium in New Jersey on July 5, 2026.
Norway’s Cinderella story gets its biggest moment
This is a country that had never won a World Cup knockout match before this tournament. That changed on June 30, 2026, when Haaland scored in the 86th minute to give Norway a 2-1 victory over Ivory Coast, securing that historic first knockout-stage win.
Five-time World Cup champions. One of the most decorated international programs in the sport’s history.
The Haaland-Gabriel matchup: a rivalry exported to the world stage
Gabriel Magalhães is not a soft defender. The Brazilian centre-back has been one of the Premier League’s most physical and technically sound center-backs in recent years. Arsenal built a genuine title challenge around a backline he anchors.
Transporting that rivalry to a World Cup knockout stage, at a stadium the size of MetLife, in front of a crowd of roughly 82,000 people, is the kind of storyline that writes itself.
What this means for Norway, and for Haaland’s legacy
Haaland has historically had fewer opportunities to shine at international level simply because Norway, until now, was not a tournament team. They did not qualify for World Cups regularly.
This tournament has changed that equation. A late winner against Ivory Coast. A header past Gabriel to knock out Brazil.
For investors and markets adjacent to football, the implications follow Haaland’s commercial profile. Sponsorship valuations, boot deal visibility, and platform audiences all move with World Cup performance in ways that even dominant club seasons do not fully replicate.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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