Four group-stage matches are scheduled for day 11 of the 2026 FIFA World Cup across venues in the U.S. and Mexico [1].
These fixtures are part of a larger, expanded tournament structure that impacts how teams progress toward the knockout stages. The 2026 event features a 48-team field [2] and spans 39 days [2], marking a significant increase in scale from previous editions.
WION said the day 11 schedule includes matchups between Argentina and Austria, France and Iraq, Norway and Senegal, and Jordan and Algeria [1]. These four matches [1] represent a critical juncture in the group stages as teams fight for positioning.
However, the exact schedule for the day remains a point of contention among sources. While WION lists the aforementioned clashes, the New York Times said that Belgium and Iran were scheduled to play on the same day. Furthermore, the FIFA.com live blog indicated that no Argentina-Austria fixture appears in the official schedule for day 11.
The contradictions highlight the complexity of coordinating a tournament across multiple host countries. With 48 teams [2] competing, the logistics of scheduling and reporting have become more prone to error. The disparity between the WION report and official FIFA data suggests a lack of synchronization in how the daily fixtures are being communicated to the public.
Despite the conflicting reports, the tournament continues to follow its 39-day timeline [2]. Fans and analysts are relying on official FIFA updates to verify the final match pairings, and kickoff times for the remaining group-stage games.
“The 2026 event features a 48-team field and spans 39 days”
The conflicting reports regarding the day 11 schedule underscore the logistical challenges of the first 48-team World Cup. When secondary news sources report fixtures that contradict official FIFA data, it creates confusion for international audiences and betting markets, emphasizing the necessity of relying on primary governing body schedules over third-party summaries.


