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This is the rare bracket question that’s almost entirely settled before the final whistle even blows on the group it depends on. Group C wrapped yesterday with Brazil topping the table and Morocco finishing second behind them. Group F closes out tonight, and the Netherlands are the heavy favourite to finish top of it. Put those two facts together and the picture is about as clear as it gets at this stage of a World Cup: the Netherlands’ Round of 32 opponent is Morocco, June 29, at Estadio BBVA in Monterrey.
The Netherlands enter tonight’s match against Tunisia on 4 points and a +4 goal difference, tied with Japan on both counts and ahead only on goals scored (7 to 6). Tunisia, by contrast, are already eliminated — 0 points, a -8 goal difference, and a 0-4 loss to Japan already on the books in this group. Koeman’s side is about as heavy a favourite as exists on tonight’s entire card.
The one honest caveat: this isn’t mathematically locked until the final whistle. If Netherlands stumble badly against Tunisia while Japan beats Sweden by enough, the order at the top of Group F could theoretically still flip — which would send Japan to Monterrey for Morocco instead, and the Netherlands to Houston for Brazil. Treat tonight’s Netherlands-Tunisia score as a formality that still technically needs to happen, not a foregone conclusion to skip.

Netherlands arrive as three-time World Cup runners-up — 1974, 1978, 2010 — still chasing the trophy that’s eluded them across more than half a century of near-misses. Ronald Koeman, in his second spell in charge, has built this run around Virgil van Dijk’s captaincy and a defence stacked with Premier League quality, with Memphis Depay (the program’s all-time leading scorer) and Cody Gakpo carrying the attack. The one real absence is creative midfielder Xavi Simons, ruled out months ago with a ruptured ACL — Tijjani Reijnders and Frenkie de Jong have had to cover that gap instead, and have done it well enough to put up 27 goals across an unbeaten qualifying campaign and a group stage that’s gone almost exactly to plan.
Morocco are the story of this matchup, and arguably the more dangerous name on paper than their seeding suggests. This is essentially the same core that reached the 2022 semifinals in Qatar — the first African and Arab nation ever to get that far — built around captain Achraf Hakimi, now a Champions League winner with PSG and arguably the best right-back in the world. Brahim Díaz supplies the creativity, having finished as top scorer at AFCON 2025. The complication: longtime manager Walid Regragui, the man who built that 2022 run, resigned in March, just months before the tournament. His replacement, Mohamed Ouahbi, is a 49-year-old first-time senior head coach — though one who arrives with a genuine credential of his own, having just led Morocco’s under-20 side to the U20 World Cup title. Nine players from the 2022 semifinal squad are still here. The system and the dressing room know each other; it’s the man in charge who’s new to this exact stage.

For the Netherlands, this is a chance to finally turn three runner-up finishes into something more — and a Morocco side that’s lost its World Cup-winning-pedigree manager less than four months out is, on paper, a gettable Round of 32 draw for a team with Koeman’s roster depth. For Morocco, it’s a chance to prove the 2022 run wasn’t a one-off built entirely around Regragui’s specific management, and that Ouahbi can carry a golden generation of players one round deeper than they managed against Brazil and Scotland in the group stage.
Worth flagging for context on the bracket as a whole: whichever team finishes Group F runner-up instead — most likely Sweden or Japan, depending on tonight’s result in Dallas — inherits the harder draw on paper: Brazil, fresh off topping Group C, on June 29 in Houston. Finishing top of Group F isn’t just about seeding; it’s the difference between Morocco and Vinícius Júnior.

Barring a genuine shock in Kansas City tonight, the Netherlands know their Round of 32 opponent five days out — a rare luxury at this stage of the tournament, when most of the bracket is still being argued out by goal difference and third-place tiebreakers. Koeman’s three-time bridesmaids against Ouahbi’s first tournament in charge of a team that still remembers what a semifinal run feels like. June 29, Monterrey. Mark it down, with the small print intact until the final whistle tonight.