Algeria’s inspiring 2026 FIFA World Cup journey came to an end on Friday after a spirited performance against Switzerland, with the European side claiming a 2-0 victory to book their place in the Round of 16.
Algeria began brightly and looked intent on taking the game to their opponents. Early combinations involving Riyad Mahrez, Houssem Aouar and Ramiz Zerrouki repeatedly stretched the Swiss defence, but the decisive final touch proved elusive.
Their positive start was interrupted after just 10 minutes when Switzerland struck through Breel Embolo. The goal was crafted by an outstanding run from Johan Manzambi, before Embolo finished from close range, handing the Swiss the advantage.

Algeria continued to play and search for a goal. Aouar tested Gregor Kobel from distance, while Mahrez remained a constant creative outlet as Algeria searched for a route back into the contest.
Just 48 seconds into the second half, Dan Ndoye punished an unfortunate Algerian clearance with a composed finish into the far corner to double Switzerland’s lead and leave the North Africans facing a mountain to climb.

Petkovic responded positively, introducing attacking reinforcements including Amine Gouiri, Jaouen Hadjam, Anis Hadj Moussa and Hicham Boudaoui as Algeria continued to push forward.
The changes injected fresh energy, with Mahrez seeing a first-time effort brilliantly blocked before Hadjam tried his luck from range, but Switzerland’s experienced defence stood firm.
Even in the closing stages, Algeria refused to abandon their attacking intent. Adil Boulbina looked lively after coming on, while the Fennecs continued to press high in search of a breakthrough. However, the scores remained the same as Switzerland claimed the victory.

While the result brings Algeria’s campaign to a close, it should not diminish what has been a memorable tournament for the North Africans.
Although their dream of a first-ever FIFA World Cup knockout victory remains unfulfilled, the Fennecs leave the global stage having enhanced both their reputation and that of African football.
