Colombia’s 2026 World Cup journey has come to a heartbreaking end.
After more than 120 minutes of tense, scoreless football, Los Cafeteros were eliminated by Switzerland in a dramatic penalty shootout, losing 4-3 and watching their quarterfinal dream disappear at BC Place in Vancouver.
The scenes at the final whistle told the story. Davinson Sánchez looked to the heavens. Cucho Hernández slowly returned to his teammates. Colombian players collapsed onto the field as Switzerland celebrated a historic victory.
Both Sánchez and Hernández missed during the shootout, with Swiss goalkeeper Gregor Kobel making the decisive save before Ruben Vargas converted the winning penalty.
For Colombia, the defeat will be especially painful because the chances were there.
Gustavo Puerta forced Kobel into a spectacular save in the first half, while Luis Suárez wasted a major opportunity after winning possession high up the field. In extra time, Jhon Lucumí came agonizingly close when his header crashed off the crossbar, while Jaminton Campaz missed another golden chance late in the match.
But despite periods of pressure and a sea of Colombian yellow inside the sold-out stadium, the breakthrough never came.
More than 52,000 fans packed BC Place, with Colombian supporters overwhelmingly dominating the atmosphere. For much of the night, Vancouver looked and sounded like a home match for Los Cafeteros.
The evening may also have marked the final World Cup appearance of James Rodríguez. The 34-year-old captain was substituted in the 66th minute and received a standing ovation from the crowd in what could prove to be his last moment on football’s biggest stage.
Switzerland now advances to the World Cup quarterfinals for the first time since 1954, where it will face Lionel Messi and Argentina.
For Colombia, there will be plenty of questions about the missed opportunities. But for now, there is only heartbreak.
A World Cup run filled with hope, passion and massive support from Colombians across Canada ended in the cruelest way possible — from the penalty spot.







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