Egypt coach Hossam Hassan says the Pharaohs will not fear anyone after their historic march into the FIFA World Cup Round of 32.
The North Africans reached the knockout stage for the first time after a tense 1-1 draw with Iran, surviving late pressure and a stoppage-time VAR scare before sealing second place in Group G. The draw was enough to secure Egypt’s first knockout-stage qualification.
For Egypt, this was more than a point.
It was proof of nerve, resilience and progress. The Pharaohs finished the group stage unbeaten and now face Australia in the Round of 32, turning a long-awaited breakthrough into a fresh test of ambition. The Guardian also reported that Egypt advanced to face Australia, while Iran were left waiting on other results.
Hassan’s message after the match was clear.
“We’re unbeaten and we’re proud of that,” he said, according to FIFA. “It’s an honour to get through to the next round. I’d like to thank my players, because they’ve brought immense joy to our fans. I’m not thinking about our next opponent; we’re ready to play against anyone.”
The Egypt coach also said his side could adapt, respect every opponent and still play without fear.
That is now the emotional line around Egypt’s campaign.
The Pharaohs did not cruise into the knockouts. They had to survive a frantic finish against Iran, who thought they had found a stoppage-time winner before VAR ruled it out for offside. The Guardian reported that Egypt goalkeeper Mostafa Shobeir made key saves, while Iran also struck the bar during a tense finale.
But tournament football rewards more than control.
It rewards timing. It rewards discipline. It rewards teams that can absorb pressure without losing their shape or their belief. Egypt found enough of all three.
Iran’s position remains uncertain. The draw left them dependent on other results for a possible best third-placed route.
Egypt, however, can plan with certainty.
Australia are next, and that fixture gives the last 32 a sharp storyline. The Socceroos reached the knockouts after their own cautious 0-0 draw with Paraguay, while Egypt arrive unbeaten and carrying the force of a national breakthrough.
Hassan still has issues to manage. Mohannad Lashin will miss the Australia match through suspension after receiving his second yellow card, while Hossam Abdel-Magid remains affected by injury. Hassan also went on to say Egypt have 26 players and that they are “all up to the task.”
That depth may now matter as much as Egypt’s confidence.
For years, the Pharaohs carried the weight of history into World Cup campaigns. This time, they have turned that weight into momentum. They are unbeaten, through, and no longer chasing a first knockout breakthrough.
They have it.
Now Egypt must answer the harder question: how far can a fearless team go?