Saudi Arabia arrives in 2026 as the one team in the tournament that can say, without anyone arguing, that they beat the eventual champions in the last one. Lusail Stadium. November 22, 2022. Argentina were up 1-0 through Messi from the spot, Saudi Arabia were being written off at half-time, and then two goals in five minutes — Al-Shehri and then Al-Dawsari's curler into the top corner — flipped the group and most of the betting markets on earth.
Three and a half years later, a lot of that team is still here. Hervé Renard, the French manager who coached them through that tournament, left and came back and is now in his second spell. The Saudi Pro League has poured money into the domestic game in a way that's reshaped the sport — Ronaldo at Al-Nassr, Neymar briefly at Al-Hilal, a dozen European stars who moved for contracts that rewrote the market. Readers know the backdrop. The national team sits inside all of it.
Don't expect flash. Renard's sides defend in a block, break on the wings, and score from set pieces and Al-Dawsari moments. They drew a tough Group L. They won't score many. But if they keep a clean sheet for 70 minutes, anything can happen — and they've already proven it once.