LOS ANGELES, United States
Spain defeated Austria 3:0 in Los Angeles on July 2, 2026, and qualified for the round of 16 of the 2026 World Cup, ending a sixteen-year wait for a victory in the knockout stage of football’s biggest tournament.
According to match reports, Mikel Oyarzabal scored twice, while Pedro Porro added the third goal, heading in to finish one of Spain’s cleanest moves of the evening.
In a match that belonged to the first knockout round of the tournament’s expanded format, Luis de la Fuente’s team imposed possession, rhythm and territorial control from the start, while Austria spent most of the match searching for a way out of the high press.
The result confirmed that the reigning European champions at this World Cup are not only a national team with strong names, but also a side capable, at the decisive moment, of combining patient build-up play with directness in the final third.
For Spain, this victory also carried symbolic weight because, after winning the world title in 2010, it had remained without a victory in elimination matches in the following editions of the tournament.
The key player of the match was Mikel Oyarzabal, a forward who once again showed in the Spanish system how valuable his ability is to move at the right time between the centre-backs and the midfield line.
According to the NDTV Sports report, Oyarzabal scored the first goal in the 36th minute, after a precise move that broke through the Austrian defence and allowed him to finish from a favourable position.
That goal changed the tone of the match because it forced Austria to start looking for more space going forward from a more cautious block, while giving Spain additional security in possession.
Oyarzabal struck for the second time late on, in the 89th minute, confirming the victory and removing any doubt about progression. In a match in which much of the attention was directed toward Spain’s young creators, his composure in the penalty area proved to be the decisive difference.
Oyarzabal’s performance is particularly important in the context of the Spanish attack, which under De la Fuente does not depend exclusively on a classic centre-forward, but on combining lines, wingers moving inside and midfielders arriving in the final third.
FIFA’s list of Spain’s squad for the tournament confirms the breadth of attacking options, including Lamine Yamal, Dani Olmo, Ferran Torres, Nico Williams and Oyarzabal, but against Austria it was precisely the Real Sociedad forward who was the most concrete.
Such a player profile suits the Spanish model of play because he does not seek only the final touch, but participates in the press, drops to receive the ball and opens space for teammates.
The Guardian also highlighted in its match report his second goal after a timely run, which well describes the way Spain punished moments of Austrian lateness.
For a team aiming for a deep run in the tournament, the fact that Oyarzabal can take responsibility for finishing represents important tactical capital.
The second goal, scored by Pedro Porro in the 66th minute, was the moment in which Spanish control received clear confirmation on the scoreboard.
According to reports by The Guardian and El PaÃs, the move included patient preparation, precise off-the-ball movement and a cross that Porro turned into a headed goal.
That detail showed an important element of the current Spain: although the team still builds its play through possession, it does not rely only on short passes through the middle, but increasingly looks for finishes through the wide corridors.
Porro had a double task in that role, because he had to hold the width and at the same time recognise the moment when he could enter the final third as an extra player.
The goal opened the match further and pushed Austria into a situation in which it had to take risks against an opponent that most enjoys the space between the lines.
For Spain, that goal also had psychological value. After the first goal there was room for an Austrian comeback, especially because Ralf Rangnick’s teams traditionally try to use aggressive pressing to provoke mistakes in the build-up.
But after Porro’s goal, the match entered a phase in which Spain could control the tempo, calm possession and choose the moments to accelerate.
According to The Guardian’s report, the Spanish team had a pronounced superiority in possession in the second half, and such a balance of power further limited Austrian attempts to come back.
It is especially important that the goal came from a wide player, because that confirms the breadth of the threat Spain creates in different zones.
In knockout matches, such variety is often decisive, especially against opponents preparing to close down the best-known attacking channels.