Soccer-Panama coach Christiansen says World Cup tiebreak rule bad for competition


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Panama coach Thomas Christiansen announces his World Cup squad - CAR Pandeportes, Panama City, Panama - May 26, 2026 Panama coach Thomas Christiansen during the squad announcement REUTERS/Enea Lebrun

EAST RUTHERFORD, New ⁠Jersey, June 26 (Reuters) - Panama coach Thomas Christiansen lamented a new World Cup ⁠rulethat has left his team mathematically eliminated before their final Group ‌L game, with a Saturday clash against England offering only a chance to claw back some pride.

Panama lost their opener to Ghana 1-0 and fell to Croatia by the same margin in their ​subsequent match, leaving them with no path to ⁠the knockout stage - even if ⁠they could somehow topple England - thanks to FIFA's new tiebreak rule that prioritises head-to-head ⁠results.

"It's ‌a shame, as before this fixture, we are already out. So that removes the excitement on our side," Christiansen told reporters on Friday.

"When there ⁠are new laws or new rules, you see the ​feedback, how it works, ‌and you see how the situation leaves a group with a match ⁠that is ​not that important anymore. Well, it might be important for England so that they might be first or second.

"That's important for them, but it's important when you have a team ⁠that is already out because of this rule. ​I think that is not good for the competition itself."

England are hoping to regain momentum after a 0-0 draw against Ghana that resurfaced decades-old frustrations for their fans ⁠at major tournaments and Christiansen said he expects every bit of the English experience on display at New York New Jersey Stadium.

England beat Croatia 4-2 in their opener and a win against Panama would help them clinch the group, pending ​the result of Saturday's other clash between Croatia and ⁠Ghana.

"Tomorrow, we'd like to leave on a good note and make history, and hopefully ​positive history, not negative history," said Christiansen.

"We've qualified ‌Panama for the second-ever World Cup. It's a ​source of pride for me, but also I have this bittersweet taste."

(Reporting by Amy Tennery in East Rutherford, New JerseyEditing by Christian Radnedge)

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