Thursday, July 9, 2026
World Cup

Norway World Cup Quarter-Final: Why Norway’s Rise Is Not Just About Erling Haaland

Nicole Powell, Manager · · 4 min read
Norway World Cup Quarter-Final: Why Norway’s Rise Is Not Just About Erling Haaland

Norway have reached their first ever World Cup quarter-final, and most of the credit is landing on one man.

Erling Haaland has scored in each of his last 14 competitive appearances for his country, a run of 27 goals, and he sits joint top of the scoring charts at this tournament with seven, taking his overall record to 62 goals in 54 appearances for Norway.

Ahead of Saturday’s meeting with England, the Norway vs England odds tell their own story about how far this Norway squad has travelled at a World Cup being staged across the United States, Mexico, and Canada, but Haaland’s brilliance is only the most visible part of a much deeper transformation.

A 26-Year Wait, Finally Over

Norway had not reached a major tournament since Euro 2000, missing 12 in a row, including every World Cup since 1998.

Qualification finally arrived through an unbeaten campaign built on more than one forward, and it is that squad depth, more than any single scoring run, that explains why this Norway side has gone further than any before it.

Improvements to the System

Behind the golden generation is two decades of infrastructure work by the Football Association of Norway.

Long, dark winters used to restrict how much children could play, so the federation prioritised artificial pitches, building 539 new ones and renovating a further 586 between 2016 and 2025, giving young players year-round access to consistent surfaces.

Coach education expanded alongside it, with more than 17,000 coaches completing Norway’s grassroots coaching pathway since 2011 and close to 2,000 taking the UEFA B diploma since 2017.

The clearest structure arrived in 2015 with Landslagsskolen, the national team school, which keeps children in local clubs with no formal selection until age 12, before around 10% of each age group enters a structured pathway toward the youth national teams.

Haaland, Martin Odegaard, and Alexander Sorloth all progressed through a system built long before any of them were household names.

Sorloth Shared the Goal-Scoring Load

Alexander Sorloth did plenty of the early heavy lifting alongside Haaland. Norway beat Italy home and away during qualifying, winning 3-0 in June 2025, a game Sorloth scored in, and then 4-1 in November, when Haaland scored twice to seal top spot in the group.

Sorloth also found the net against Cyprus, Moldova, and Estonia along the way, giving manager Stale Solbakken two genuine goal threats rather than one heading into the World Cup quarter-finals.

Odegaard, Nusa and Nyland Have All Delivered To Reach World Cup Quarter-Final

The tournament itself has demanded contributions from across the team, too.

Captain Martin Odegaard has controlled matches from midfield and led the celebrations after each knockout win.

In the round of 32 win over Ivory Coast, the Arsenal midfielder became only the third player on record since 1966 to register an assist in each of his first three World Cup appearances, a company that previously included only Igor Belanov and Michael Ballack.

Antonio Nusa produced one of the standout goals of that same match, a 2-1 win that Haaland settled late on with a scrappy header.

In the last 16, goalkeeper Orjan Nyland made the saves that kept Brazil out as Norway won 2-1, ending the five-time champions’ campaign.

Solbakken has rotated a squad with real depth rather than building every plan around a single forward, resting Haaland during the group stage, and still guiding the side past their toughest opponents and into the World Cup quarter-finals.

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Norway World Cup 2026
FIFA Fussball Weltmeisterschaft 2026, Achtelfinale, Brasilien vs. Norwegen, 05.07.2026, New Jersey Stadion Norwegen feiert als Mannschaft am Mittelkreis Orjan Nyland Kristoffer Ajer David Wolfe Patrick Berg Alexander Sorloth Sander Berge Erling Haaland Martin Odegaard *** 2026 FIFA World Cup, Round of 16, Brazil vs. Norway, July 5, 2026, New Jersey Stadium: The Norwegian team celebrates as a group at the center circle—Orjan Nyland, Kristoffer Ajer, David Wolfe, Patrick Berg, Alexander Sorloth, Sander Berge, Erling Haaland, Martin Odegaard Copyright: xBahhoxKarax

The Depth Runs Through the Whole Pyramid

That depth is not confined to the national team.

Bodo/Glimt, a club from a Norwegian town of around 55,000 people, became the first Norwegian side to reach the Champions League group stage and then beat Italian side Lazio in a penalty shootout to reach the Europa League semi-final in the 2024/25 season, the furthest any Norwegian club has progressed in a major European competition.

Progress like that at club level does not happen by accident, and it landed in the same two-year window as the national team’s own revival.

It points to a football pyramid producing talent well beyond its most famous export.

Norway vs England: England Stand Between Norway and the Last Four

Norway now face Harry Kane’s England in Miami on Saturday for the World Cup quarter-finals. Whatever happens next, a nation that spent nearly three decades outside major tournaments has already rewritten its own history.

The football odds for the rest of the competition reflect how seriously Norway are now being taken, not as a one-man show but as a genuinely complete side, built on years of planning that have finally found a stage big enough to prove it.

Nicole Powell, Manager

Nicole Powell is the site manager of ExtraTime Talk, a football site in the Last Word on Sports (LWOS) network. She previously managed Last Word on Motorsport. She specialises in F1 and football, and is also the lead content editor at Transfer News Blitz, sub-editor within the News Blitz and SIP Media Solutions network, as well as a women's football writer at Beyond the Pitch.

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