The Round of 32 encounter takes place at Boston Stadium in Foxborough, Massachusetts, where Germany arrive after topping Group E with six points. Nagelsmann’s side announced themselves as title contenders by dismantling Curaçao 7-1 before overcoming Ivory Coast 2-1 to seal early qualification. Their final group fixture brought a timely reminder that improvements are still needed, however, as Ecuador inflicted a 2-1 defeat despite Germany having already secured first place.
Paraguay’s group-stage journey could hardly have been more different. Their tournament appeared in danger of ending after a 4-1 defeat to hosts United States in the opening match, but Alfaro’s players responded with impressive resilience. A disciplined 1-0 victory over Türkiye, achieved after playing the entire second half with ten men, reignited their campaign before a hard-earned 0-0 draw against Australia secured four points and a place among the tournament’s best third-placed teams.
Germany will once again rely on one of the competition’s most exciting attacking units. Jamal Musiala and Florian Wirtz continue to provide creativity behind Kai Havertz, while Deniz Undav has become one of the stories of the tournament. The striker has scored three goals despite coming exclusively from the bench and enters the knockout stage as Germany’s most effective impact substitute. Defensively, Germany have been dealt a significant setback after Nico Schlotterbeck was ruled out for the remainder of the tournament with a serious ankle injury, leaving Antonio Rüdiger to marshal the back line.
Paraguay also welcome an important boost. Miguel Almirón returns after serving his suspension and is expected to partner Julio Enciso in leading the counter-attacking threat. Midfielder Diego Gómez, however, is unavailable after accumulating two yellow cards during the group stage.
This will be only the second World Cup meeting between the nations. Their previous encounter came in the Round of 16 at the 2002 World Cup in South Korea, where Germany finally broke Paraguay’s resistance in the 88th minute through Oliver Neuville before eventually finishing runners-up to Brazil.
The tactical contrast promises to define the contest. Nagelsmann’s Germany favour aggressive pressing, fluid movement and sustained possession, while Alfaro has built Paraguay around defensive organisation, compact positioning and quick transitions. Germany may carry the stronger pedigree, but Paraguay have already shown throughout the group stage that they are capable of frustrating more fancied opponents when discipline and structure take centre stage.






