Erling Haaland has delivered on every expectation at his first World Cup, powering Norway to its first quarterfinal appearance since the country’s last tournament trip in 1998.
A Historic Run for Norway
Norway advanced through the group stage before eliminating Ivory Coast in the Round of 32 with a late Haaland goal. In the Round of 16, Haaland scored both goals in a 2-1 win over five-time champions Brazil, one of the tournament’s most significant results, sending the Scandinavian side into the last eight.
Haaland’s Scoring Record
Haaland enters the quarterfinals with seven goals, sitting just behind Golden Boot leaders Kylian Mbappé and Lionel Messi, who are tied on eight apiece. His tournament has been built on clinical finishing and physical dominance, qualities that have made him one of the most feared strikers in world football at club level with Manchester City.
The Next Test
Norway faces England in the quarterfinals on July 11 in Miami, a matchup that pits Haaland against a defense anchored by Harry Kane’s attacking counterpart on the other end of the pitch. Advancing further would mark uncharted territory for a Norwegian team without recent World Cup pedigree.
Why This Run Matters
Haaland’s performances have added a genuine underdog storyline to a tournament otherwise dominated by traditional powers. A continued run deep into the knockout rounds would also strengthen his case for both the Golden Boot and a place in this year’s Ballon d’Or conversation.








