TL;DR: In a jaw-dropping World Cup shocker, underdog Paraguay (ranked 34th) sent 12th-ranked Germany packing in the Round of 32. After battling to a 1-1 draw over 120 minutes, goalkeeper Orlando Gill became a national hero, pulling off two critical saves to seal a 4-3 victory on penalties.
Let’s be honest—nobody saw this coming. Germany rolled into the Round of 32 at Boston Stadium flexing 78% of the possession and a roster dripping with European elite. But football doesn’t care about paper status, and Paraguay just proved it by delivering one of the greatest knockout-stage upsets in World Cup history.
The Masterclass Setup
- The Iron Wall: Paraguay’s manager Gustavo Alfaro structured a defensive 4-5-1 fortress that completely neutralised the German machines. Leroy Sané, Florian Wirtz, and Kai Havertz repeatedly passed into a red-and-white wall of pure grit.
- The First Strike: Right before halftime in the 42nd minute, the stadium erupted. A perfectly recycled ball found Matías Galarza, who whipped a cross straight to an unmarked Julio Enciso. The young star headed it coolly past a stranded Manuel Neuer to make it 1-0.
Germany Fights Back (And Dies by VAR)
- The Equalizer: Germany came out alive in the second half. By the 54th minute, Wirtz delivered a pinpoint cross from the wing, allowing Kai Havertz to leap highest and smash a header past Orlando Gill to level the score at 1-1.athlonsports.com
- The Overturned Dagger: Extra time provided maximum drama. In the 102nd minute, Germany’s Jonathan Tah buried what looked like the match-winner off a corner. But the referee went to the monitor VAR revealed Waldemar Anton had shoved keeper Orlando Gill to the floor. Goal disallowed.
The Shootout Drama
For the first time since 2006, Germany found themselves in a World Cup penalty shootout. Historically, they never lose these—but 2026 had other plans.
The Guardian
- The Stop: Gill set the tone immediately, denying Kai Havertz on Germany’s opening kick.
- The Chaos: Misses from both squads pushed the tension to sudden death.FIFA
- The Winner: When Jonathan Tah blazed his kick over the bar, it left the stage open for José Canale. The defender walked up with ice in his veins, smashed it home, and triggered absolute scenes across South America.
Paraguay advances to the Round of 16 to face either France or Sweden, while Germany heads home wondering how it all slipped away











