Ninety-two years. That’s how long Egypt had waited to win a game at a FIFA World Cup. Since their debut in 1934, the Pharaohs had shown up, competed, gone home — but never, ever tasted victory on football’s biggest stage. On a cool Sunday evening at BC Place in Vancouver, that wait finally, beautifully, dramatically ended.

Egypt came from behind to defeat New Zealand 3–1 in one of the most emotionally charged matches of the 2026 World Cup group stage. It wasn’t pretty in the first half. It wasn’t comfortable. But by the final whistle, the scoreline told a story of a nation reborn on the grandest football stage of all.
New Zealand Start the Party — Then Crash It
Nobody told New Zealand they were supposed to be the villagers in this fairytale. The All Whites came out with fire and purpose, pressing high and making Egypt look disjointed in the early exchanges.

Then came the 15th minute. A corner from Tim Payne. Defender Finn Surman rose above everyone, planted a firm header into the net, and BC Place erupted — at least, the quarter of it draped in white and black. New Zealand 1–0 Egypt. The All Whites were doing it again, just like they had against Iran.

For the next 40 minutes, Egypt floundered. Emam Ashour poked wide when he should have scored. Salah — yes, that Salah — prodded tamely at the keeper when the goal was gaping. It felt like another night of heartbreak for the Pharaohs. The half-time whistle blew and Egypt walked off to the dressing room trailing, looking lost.
Salah Speaks — Egypt Listen

Whatever manager Hossam Hassan said at half-time, it worked like electricity through the veins of a team that had been sleepwalking.
Egypt came out in the second half like a completely different side — sharper, more urgent, with Mo Salah finally getting the service he deserved. The pressure built. Chances started appearing. The All Whites, who had defended heroically, were beginning to crack.

The equaliser arrived in the 58th minute. Mostafa Ziko found himself completely free inside the box and headed home with conviction. Egypt fans in the stands lost their minds. The bench celebrated wildly. After forty-odd minutes of being second-best, the Pharaohs were level.

Then came the goal that will be replayed for years. The 67th minute. Mohamed Salah — Egypt’s captain, Liverpool legend, one of the greatest players of his generation — received the ball, cut in sharply on his left foot, and curled it into the net with that signature precision. Pure class. Pure Salah. The Egyptian captain wheeled away in celebration and you could see exactly what it meant to him. This wasn’t just a goal. This was history.

The Trezeguet cherry on top arrived in the 82nd minute — fittingly assisted by Salah from a corner — to seal the most significant result in Egyptian football history.
History Written, A Nation Celebrates

Let the numbers sink in: Egypt’s first-ever FIFA World Cup victory. Their first time scoring three goals in a World Cup match. The first Egyptian player ever to score off the bench in the competition, courtesy of Trezeguet.

For New Zealand, the defeat stings — but the story isn’t over. With Belgium and Iran playing to a draw earlier in the day, the All Whites still have a shot at the Round of 32 if they can beat Belgium in their final group game. They’ve shown enough quality to believe it’s possible.

But tonight belongs to Egypt. Tonight belongs to Salah. Tonight belongs to 92 years of waiting — finally, gloriously paid off.
The Pharaohs are alive. The Pharaohs are coming.
Man of the Match: Mo Salah













