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Egypt vs Australia Penalty Shootout Thriller: Mohamed Salah 's Egypt Eliminates Australia, Reaches FIFA Top 16

Egypt held their nerve from the penalty spot to beat Australia 4-2 after a 1-1 draw in their FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 tie at Dallas Stadium in Arlington, Texas, on July 3. After 120 tense minutes, the Pharaohs advanced to the Round of 16 while the Socceroos were left to rue two missed penalties.

Harry Souttar and Lucas Herrington failed to convert for Australia in the shootout, while Egypt were flawless. Mahmoud Saber, Ramy Rabia, Mohamed Salah and Hossam Abdelmaguid all scored from the spot to settle a match that had swung repeatedly across normal time and extra time.

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Egypt beat Australia 4-2 on penalties after a 1-1 draw in their FIFA World Cup 2026 Round of 32 tie on July 3 in Arlington, Texas, advancing to the Round of 16 following Mohamed Hany's record-setting own goal.

The result was cruel on Australia, who fought back strongly after falling behind in the first half. Egypt had led through Emam Ashour, only for Mohamed Hany’s own goal to bring the Socceroos level after the break. Neither side could find a winner before penalties decided a draining knockout contest.

Mohamed Salah

Egypt survive Australia pressure before shootout win

Egypt began with greater composure and used Mohamed Salah’s set-piece quality to unsettle Australia. Their opening goal came from a clever free-kick routine, with Salah involved in the build-up and Ashour applying the finish. It gave Egypt control and forced Australia into a more direct approach.

Australia had an early warning shot when Cristian Volpato struck the crossbar, but they grew into the match only after the first-half hydration break. Tony Popovic’s side began to load the penalty area with crosses, using Harry Souttar’s aerial presence and the movement of Alessandro Circati to stretch Egypt’s defence.

Egypt remained dangerous whenever Salah found space, especially from dead-ball situations. Their planned routines kept Australia uncertain, although the Pharaohs could not turn that threat into a second goal before half-time. The interval arrived with Egypt ahead, but Australia had enough momentum to believe the game was still open.

The equaliser came in the 55th minute from a moment Egypt defender Hany will not want to revisit. Aiden O’Neill whipped in a dangerous inswinging free-kick, and Hany, trying to prevent the ball from reaching Circati, glanced it past his own goalkeeper. Australia had their reward for a forceful start to the second half.

Mohamed Hany own goal adds unwanted World Cup record

Hany’s own goal carried wider significance beyond the scoreline. It was listed as the 13th own goal of the 2026 FIFA World Cup, the highest figure recorded in a single edition of the tournament. Hany also became only the second player in World Cup history to score two own goals at the same tournament.

The unwanted mark placed him alongside Bulgaria’s Ivan Vutsov, who had endured a similar fate in 1966. For Egypt, though, the more immediate concern was surviving Australia’s pressure after the equaliser. The Socceroos pushed higher, while Egypt made changes to regain energy and protect their structure.

Haissem Hassan replaced Mostafa Zico and Abdelmaguid came on for Hamdy Fathy as Egypt tried to freshen the midfield and defence. Australia also turned to their bench, introducing Mohamed Toure and Ajdin Hrustic as Popovic searched for greater control in the closing stages.

The final minutes of normal time belonged to Egypt. Australia goalkeeper Patrick Beach produced a superb stoppage-time save to deny Rabia’s glancing header, pushing the ball away with a strong left hand. Moments later, Salah delivered again from a corner, but Beach punched clear to keep the score level.

Penalties decide Australia vs Egypt after extra time stalemate

Extra time brought tension but little fluency. Both teams looked physically stretched after an intense 90 minutes, and clear chances became scarce. Egypt continued to probe through corners and wide deliveries, while Australia dropped deeper and appeared increasingly willing to take the match to penalties.

There was also a major late goalkeeping decision from Australia before the shootout. The change underlined how much the contest had become a battle of nerve, with both benches already thinking about the pressure of penalties rather than one final attacking move.

When the shootout began, Australia were immediately under pressure after Souttar missed the opening attempt. Egypt capitalised through Saber, and although Jackson Irvine and Awer Mabile scored for the Socceroos, the Pharaohs did not blink. Salah converted his penalty with authority, keeping Egypt in front.

Herrington’s miss left Australia on the brink, and Abdelmaguid finished the job by scoring Egypt’s fourth penalty. The Egyptian celebrations reflected both relief and belief, especially after they had seen their first-half lead wiped out and had spent long stretches of the second half defending.

For Australia, the defeat ends a campaign that showed resilience but also familiar knockout-stage margins. They forced their way back into the match, survived late Egyptian pressure and held on through extra time, yet the shootout exposed them. Egypt now move on with momentum, having passed a severe test of endurance and composure.

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