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Four World Cup titles. Eight finals. A footballing identity built on never, ever going quietly. And yet — Paraguay. Germany are out of the 2026 World Cup, eliminated in what is already the defining shock of this tournament, and the football world is still trying to process it.
According to Pulse Sports, Germany have become the first major nation to be eliminated from the 2026 World Cup, beaten by Paraguay in a result that nobody — outside of Asunción, presumably — saw coming. The specific scoreline, match details, and exact stage of elimination are still being confirmed, and Flagside is seeking corroboration from additional sources before updating the full match report. The headline fact, however, is not in dispute: Julian Nagelsmann's side are on a plane home, and Paraguay are still standing.
It is the kind of result that rewrites the tournament's early narrative in a single evening. Germany arrived in North America carrying the weight of recent history — a group-stage exit at Russia 2018, another at Qatar 2022 — and the unspoken understanding that this was the cycle in which they were supposed to get it right again. They did not get it right.
Paraguay eliminating Germany is not just a result — it is a statement about what this World Cup might become. South American sides have always carried a particular threat at World Cups, but Paraguay, historically a side built on defensive steel and collective grit, sending home a four-time champion is the kind of upset that echoes down through the decades. It belongs in the same conversation as Senegal beating France in 2002, the United States eliminating England in 1950, and South Korea's extraordinary run to the semi-finals on home soil.
For the remaining favourites — France, Brazil, Argentina, England, Spain — the message is clear: the bracket just got more interesting. If Germany can go out, anyone can go out.
The brutal truth is that this is now three consecutive World Cups in which Germany have failed to progress deep into the tournament. A side that once seemed constitutionally incapable of early exits has developed a habit of them. The questions about squad depth, tactical identity, and the transition away from the golden generation that peaked in 2014 have followed this team for years — and those questions are now louder than ever.
Nagelsmann will face an immediate reckoning. The Bundesliga clubs will absorb their players back. And German football, which has been rebuilding at every level since the 2018 collapse, will have to do it all again.
Paraguay, meanwhile, get to enjoy one of the great nights in their footballing history. They have earned it.
Note: Full match details including the scoreline, goalscorers, and exact stage of elimination are based on a single source (Pulse Sports) at time of publication. Flagside is actively seeking corroboration from Tier-2 and Tier-3 outlets and will update this piece — including the Key Facts block — as further confirmation becomes available.
Four World Cup titles. Eight finals. A footballing identity built on never, ever going quietly. And yet — Paraguay. Germany are out of the 2026 World Cup, eliminated in what is already the defining shock of this…
Fuentes
Pulse Sports
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