Asia arrived in North America with unprecedented hope.
A record nine teams qualified for the expanded 2026 FIFA World Cup, the continent's largest-ever representation on football's biggest stage. Many believed it marked the beginning of a new era for Asian football.
Instead, it has become a tournament of shattered expectations.
Seven teams failed to survive the group stage, Japan's heartbreaking 2-1 defeat to Brazil ended the continent's brightest hope in the Round of 32, and Australia now stands alone as Asia's last remaining representative.
For a continent celebrating its biggest-ever World Cup presence, the statistics tell a painful story. Of the AFC's nine representatives, only Japan and Australia progressed beyond the group stage. Japan has now fallen, leaving the Socceroos to carry Asia's hopes alone.
Expectations turn into disappointment
Several Asian nations arrived believing they could make history.
Japan entered as the continent's strongest contender after years of steady progress. South Korea boasted a squad featuring Son Heung-min, Lee Kang-in and Kim Min-jae, while Qatar came as reigning Asian champions. Saudi Arabia hoped years of investment in football would finally deliver results on the biggest stage.
Instead, the campaign quickly unravelled.
Jordan, Iraq, Uzbekistan, Saudi Arabia and Qatar all finished bottom of their groups, while South Korea and Iran also failed to qualify for the knockout rounds.
Japan came closest to extending Asia's challenge before Gabriel Martinelli's dramatic stoppage-time winner sent Brazil through to the Round of 16.
Why did Asia struggle?
Although Asian football has grown financially, many of the continent's top players still spend most of their careers in domestic leagues where the speed, physicality and tactical intensity differ significantly from Europe's elite competitions.
That gap becomes evident at the World Cup.
Against top opposition, Asian teams repeatedly struggled with aggressive pressing, quick transitions and physical duels. Defensive mistakes were punished instantly, while attacks often broke down under sustained pressure.
Africa shows the way
The contrast with Africa has been striking.
Morocco have once again reached the knockout rounds after eliminating the Netherlands, continuing the momentum created by their historic semifinal run in Qatar four years ago.
Many African stars develop in Europe's top leagues from an early age, arriving at the World Cup already accustomed to elite competition. Many Asian internationals, by comparison, encounter that level only during major tournaments.
One survivor remains
Australia now carries the responsibility of representing an entire continent.
Regardless of how far the Socceroos progress, the wider picture remains difficult to ignore.
The expanded World Cup was expected to showcase Asian football's rise.
Instead, it highlighted how much work remains.
Nine teams qualified. Only two reached the knockout rounds.
Now only one remains.
For Asian football, the 2026 World Cup may ultimately be remembered not for its record representation, but as a reminder that investment alone cannot bridge the gap with the world's elite. Greater exposure to top-level competition and more players competing in Europe's strongest leagues will be essential if Asia hopes to challenge consistently on football's biggest stage.
FIFA World Cup 2026 / Asian Team / Japan
While most comments will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive, moderation decisions are subjective. Published comments are readers’ own views and The Business Standard does not endorse any of the readers’ comments.
Copyright © 2026 THE BUSINESS STANDARD
All rights reserved.
