Luis Díaz leads Colombia past Uzbekistan in World Cup opener
Contemporary match reports recorded Colombia's 3-1 win over Uzbekistan in their opening FIFA World Cup 2026 Group K match, with Daniel Muñoz, Luis Díaz and Jáminton Campaz scoring for Néstor Lorenzo's side and Abbosbek Fayzullaev answering for the tournament debutants. The result gives Colombia an early advantage in a group also containing Portugal and DR Congo, especially after match reports recorded Portugal's draw with DR Congo in the other Group K fixture. The football lesson was not one-way: Uzbekistan equalised after half-time and showed enough pace and structure to keep the group alive. But Colombia's senior attackers, led by Díaz, turned the decisive moments into goals. For readers in Belgium, this is primarily a World Cup football story: it shapes a group that could produce a later opponent for major European sides and matters to fans following the full tournament through Belgian public broadcasters.
For football followers in Belgium, the result is part of the tournament map rather than a Belgian national-team story. FIFA's media-partner listing names VRT and RTBF as Belgian rightsholders, so fans, families and sports bars in Flanders, Brussels and Wallonia can follow how Colombia, Portugal, DR Congo and Uzbekistan sort Group K. The sporting significance is that Colombia now controls its own path, while Uzbekistan's debut remains competitive despite the defeat.
Luis Díaz (Colombia winger and Bayern Munich attacker, formerly of Liverpool) is the forward around whom Colombia's attack is built. Daniel Muñoz (Colombia right-back, also used as an attacking wing-back) opened the scoring. Jáminton Campaz (Colombia attacking midfielder) added the late third goal. Abbosbek Fayzullaev (Uzbekistan attacking midfielder and one of his country's leading young players) scored Uzbekistan's first World Cup goal. Néstor Lorenzo (Argentine coach appointed Colombia manager in 2022) oversees Colombia's current national-team cycle. Uzbekistan (Central Asian state independent since 1991) is appearing at a men's World Cup for the first time. Colombia (South American football nation and 2014 World Cup quarter-finalist) returned after missing Qatar 2022. Estadio Azteca (Mexico City stadium opened in 1966) is one of world football's landmark venues. Group K (World Cup group containing Portugal, DR Congo, Uzbekistan and Colombia) runs through 27 June.
Background
FIFA records list Colombia's best World Cup as the 2014 quarter-final run, followed by a round-of-16 exit in 2018 and failure to qualify for Qatar 2022. FIFA qualification records and contemporary reports show Uzbekistan reached the finals for the first time after a 0-0 draw away to the United Arab Emirates on 5 June 2025, making this match a historic debut rather than a routine group opener. The 2026 tournament also expanded to 48 teams, which FIFA regulations say sends group winners, runners-up and some third-placed sides into a round of 32.
Why now
The story is timely because contemporary match reports recorded Colombia's opening Group K win on 18 June 2026, the result that first set the competitive shape of a group containing Colombia, Uzbekistan, Portugal and DR Congo.
What to watch
The concrete signals are the 23 June Group K matches listed in FIFA tournament materials: Colombia vs DR Congo and Portugal vs Uzbekistan. Watch whether Colombia rotate or press for early qualification, and whether Uzbekistan can turn their debut goal into points.
Opposing perspectives
- Colombia supporters and coaching staff
The strongest Colombia reading is that the performance showed tournament maturity: contemporary match reports recorded a quick response after Uzbekistan's equaliser, and that matters more than stylistic dominance in a short group stage. Díaz's goal and involvement in the opener support the view that Colombia have an elite match-winner capable of deciding tight games.
- Uzbekistan supporters and neutral debutant-watchers
The strongest Uzbekistan reading is that the scoreline should not erase the debut achievement. Match reports recorded Fayzullaev's equaliser and a stronger Uzbek spell after half-time, which suggests the debutants were not overwhelmed. The concern is defensive recovery and goalkeeping detail, not whether Uzbekistan belong at the tournament.
Sources & evidence
- Al Jazeera · 2026-06-18
- The Guardian · 2026-06-18
- El País · 2026-06-18
- Aftonbladet · 2026-06-18
- FIFA match centre
- FIFA World Cup 26 Media Partners · 2025-03-04
- FIFA World Cup 2026 broadcasting rights
