FIFA World Cup 2022: Round of 16 matches, timings, Live streaming, Schedule

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  • Publish Date - December 3, 2022 / 01:10 PM IST,
    Updated On - December 3, 2022 / 01:10 PM IST

FIFA World Cup 2022 Round of 16 matches: The Netherlands take on the USA in the first match of the Round of 16 of the FIFA World Cup 2022 on Saturday, December 3. During the ongoing FIFA World Cup in Qatar, the knockout rounds begin tonight, with the first two Round of 16 matches scheduled for 8:30 PM and 12:30 AM).

The matches will become even more competitive and hard-fought as one team will be knocked out of the race every match.

Having reached the Round of 16 or pre-quarterfinals in each of the 8 groups, the group stage has officially ended. On December 4, group B’s top-ranked Argentina will take on Australia, and defending champion France will face Poland in the Round of 16. During the Round of 16, eight teams will qualify and move on to the quarterfinals, beginning December 9.

What are the teams that have qualified for Round of 16?

Netherlands, USA, France, Poland, England, Senegal, Argentina, Australia, Japan, Croatia, Brazil, South Korea, Morocco,Switzerland, Spain, and Portugal.

Where can I watch the 2022 FIFA World Cup Round of 16 matches Live Stream in India?

Sports18 and Sports18 HD will broadcast live matches from the FIFA World Cup Round of 16. JioCinema will stream the 2022 FIFA World Cup live on Android and iOS.

FIFA World Cup Round of 16 – Full Schedule (IST)

December 3 – Netherlands vs USA – (8:30 PM IST)

December 4 – Argentina vs Australia – (12:30 AM IST)

December 4 – France vs Poland – (8:30 PM IST)

December 5 – England vs Senegal – (12:30 AM IST)

December 5 – Japan vs Croatia – (8:30 PM IST)

December 6 – Brazil vs South Korea – (12:30 AM IST)

December 6 – Morocco vs Spain – (8:30 PM IST)

December 7 – Portugal vs Switzerland – (12:30 AM IST)

This is the first time a team has failed to win all three group games since 1994. This was Germany’s second successive exit from the World Cup in the group stage, despite not entering the tournament as favourites. Belgium’s golden generation flopped at the biggest stage in Qatar in 2018, after reaching the semi-finals in Russia. As the second host nation to fail to qualify for the World Cup at the group stage, Qatar was unable to do what Russia did four years ago.