Ecuador advances to World Cup knockout rounds, beats Germany 2-1
Gonzalo Plata poked the ball past Manuel Neuer in the 77th minute and Ecuador advanced to the knockout stage of the World Cup by rallying for a 2-1 win over Germany.
AP News

EAST RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) â A little flick of Gonzalo Plataâs big toe helped Ecuador make a great escape.
Plata poked the ball past Manuel Neuer in the 77th minute and lifted Ecuador to a come-from-behind 2-1 win over Germany on Thursday and into the knockout round of the World Cup for the first time since 2006.
âLife is different now. We suffered a lot,â said Plata, a 25-year-old winger who scored his ninth international goal. âWe suffered too much in the first two matches. We would have liked to secure qualification much earlier, but now weâre going forward more hungry, knowing we have to give it our all.â
Ecuador, which has lost only one of its last 22 games, finished third in Group E with four points and advanced past the group stage for the second time, headed to a possible matchup with Mexico on Tuesday in Mexico City.
A four-time champion already assured of advancement by winning its first two games, Germany will play its round of 32 game Monday at Foxborough, Massachusetts, most likely against Paraguay, Australia or Sweden.
âOn Monday itâs important that we start well,â Germany coach Julian Nagelsmann said through a translator.
Germanyâs winning streak was stopped at 11 games, one shy of the team record set in 1979-80.
âThe difference was today that the opponent wanted to win more than us, and you could really feel it, especially in the second half,â Germany midfielder Joshua Kimmich said.
Germany went ahead on Leroy SanĂ©âs second-minute goal. Aleksandar PavloviÄ chested the ball and ended up kicking Pedro Vite in the head following Nathaniel Brownâs throw-in, but American referee Tori Penso didnât whistle a foul. PavloviÄ passed to Florian Wirtz, who centered to SanĂ© just inside the penalty area to beat goalkeeper HernĂĄn GalĂndez.
Nilson Angulo equalized in the ninth minute with Ecuadorâs first goal of the tournament following a 1-0 loss to Ivory Coast and a 0-0 draw with Curaçao. Felix Nmecha lost the ball in midfield to Vite. The midfielder passed to Angulo, who dribbled toward goal and beat Neuer to the far post from just outside the area.
Penso originally awarded Germany a penalty kick less than 30 seconds into the second half after Joel Ordóñez took down Kai Havertz, but a video review ruled Sané had first fouled Vite.
With the crowd tensing as time ran down, Plata scored after Viteâs corner kick was nodded on by Kevin RodrĂguez, who was 6 yards out at the near post. Neuer, the 40-year-old Germany goalkeeper who ended two years of international retirement for the World Cup, was about to grasp the ball when Plata raised his left foot and stabbed it into the net.
SebastiĂĄn Beccacece, an Argentine who has coached Ecuador for two years, sprinted to the front of the stands, his shoulder-length blond hair flowing, to hug his wife, Patricia Persson. He had been pilloried after the poor start and paraphrased a lyric from Argentine rock band Los Redondos.
âIn loneliness you cannot always listen to what you hear. You just keep pushing forward. You ignite your fire and you continue,â he said.
A crowd of 80,663 at MetLife Stadium was mostly in Ecuadorâs yellow. FIFA said it boosted attendance to a record 3,587,539 in the 56th game of the expanded World Cup, one more than the 52 matches for the 1994 tournament in the U.S.
âWe felt at home in all these stadiums,â RodrĂguez said.
Ecuador had prepared to return to its training camp in Columbus, Ohio, rather than head home to South America.
âThey told us: `You will be back here,ââ he said. âThe staff in the kitchen, in the spa, even the drivers.â
Ecuador isnât sure of its next opponent or even where the match will be played, so fans canât lock in travel just yet.
âI hope they brought plenty of clothes in their luggage,â Plata said.
This story corrects the name of the Argentine rock band to Los Redondos.
AP Sports Writers Eric NĂșñez and Stephen Whyno contributed to this report.
Friday, June 26, 2026