Yamal and Oyarzabal push Spain past Saudi Arabia

lamine spain

Spain didn’t need long to turn a tight group into something far more comfortable. Yamal and Oyarzabal push Spain past Saudi Arabia with their impressive performances in this crucial match.

At Mercedes-Benz Stadium in Atlanta, Spain beat Saudi Arabia 4-0, scoring three times in the first 24 minutes and moving from group uncertainty into a position of control. In a section where Uruguay, Saudi Arabia, Spain and Cape Verde had all opened with one point, this was the first result that created real separation.

Lamine Yamal opened the scoring in the 10th minute, finishing from close range after Mikel Oyarzabal’s cross following a fast break. At 18 years and 343 days old, Yamal also moved into rare company as one of the youngest goal scorers in World Cup history.

Rank Player Team Scoring date Age
1 Pelé Brazil June 19, 1958 17 years, 239 days
2 Manuel Rosas Mexico July 19, 1930 18 years, 93 days
3 Gavi Spain Nov. 23, 2022 18 years, 110 days
4 Michael Owen England June 22, 1998 18 years, 190 days
5 Nicolae Kovács Romania July 14, 1930 18 years, 197 days
6 Dmitri Sychev Russia June 14, 2002 18 years, 231 days
7 Lamine Yamal Spain June 21, 2026 18 years, 343 days
8 Lionel Messi Argentina June 16, 2006 18 years, 357 days

Eleven minutes after Yamal’s opener, Oyarzabal made it 2-0 from the left side of the six-yard box after Aymeric Laporte’s headed pass from a corner. By the 24th minute, Oyarzabal had scored again, this time from very close range after Dani Olmo’s header set him up.

That sequence effectively ended the match as a contest. Saudi Arabia had come in with a point to protect and a route to making the group messy, but Spain’s early speed took away the one thing underdogs usually need most: time. The match wasn’t built on Spain slowly wearing Saudi Arabia down. It was decided by Spain refusing to let the first half breathe.

Spain turn control into early damage

The fourth came in the 49th minute, when Hassan Al-Tambakti turned the ball into his own net. It gave the scoreline its final shape, but the result had already been written by Spain’s opening burst. Spain finished with 22 shots, eight on target and six corners, while Saudi Arabia managed three shots and one on target.

For Spain, the clean sheet mattered almost as much as the score. Unai Simón had only one save to make, while the back line of Laporte, Pau Cubarsí, Marc Cucurella and Pedro Porro kept Saudi Arabia from turning rare counters into a sustained threat. Rodri and Pedri gave Spain the platform, while Yamal, Olmo and Oyarzabal supplied the early punishment.

The win also sharpened the group picture around the 2026 World Cup stage in Atlanta. Spain moved to four points and forced the rest of the group to chase. Saudi Arabia, still on one point, now head toward the final matchday with far less margin.

There was one late footnote when Ferran Torres had a stoppage-time goal overturned after a VAR review, but it didn’t change the story. Spain had already done the important work early, and they did it with the kind of ruthlessness that turns possession into a result before doubt can enter the match.

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