The 2026 World Cup hadn’t even finished its first round of group matches before Germany reminded everyone why they’re perennial contenders. Their 7-1 demolition of debutant Curaçao in Houston wasn’t just a statement — it was a piece of history.
Curaçao had briefly stunned the stadium by equalizing, but Germany responded with five unanswered goals. The final tally of seven marks only the fifth time this century that a team has scored seven or more in a World Cup match. And Germany now owns three of those five outbursts.
The Full List of 7-Goal Games Since 2000
Here’s how each of those lopsided results unfolded.
2002 — Germany 8-0 Saudi Arabia
Rudi Völler’s side opened their 2002 campaign by burying Saudi Arabia under an avalanche of goals. Leading 4-0 at halftime, the Germans finished with eight. The star was Miroslav Klose, who on his World Cup debut bagged a hat-trick — all headers. He became only the second player in tournament history to score three headed goals in a single match. That performance launched a career that would end with a record 16 World Cup goals.
2010 — Portugal 7-0 North Korea
Believe it or not, a prime Cristiano Ronaldo once went two years without scoring for Portugal. North Korea provided the perfect remedy. Portugal led just 1-0 at the break before pouring on six second-half goals. Ronaldo ended his drought with the seventh, tapping in from close range. It remains the most lopsided result in the country’s World Cup history.
2014 — Germany 7-1 Brazil
Perhaps the most shocking result in World Cup history. Brazil entered their home semifinal dreaming of a sixth title. Instead, they suffered a humiliation that still stings. Germany raced to a 5-0 lead within 29 minutes. The Mineirão was shell-shocked. Brazil’s greatest footballing humiliation happened on their own soil, in a semifinal, in front of the world.
2022 — Spain 7-0 Costa Rica
Spain’s 2022 campaign started with a stroll against Costa Rica. Dani Olmo, Marco Asensio, and Ferran Torres scored before halftime. Torres added another, Gavi made it five, and late goals from Carlos Soler and Álvaro Morata rounded out the demolition. It was Spain’s biggest World Cup win since 1986.
2026 — Germany 7-1 Curaçao
Curaçao had their moment. A spirited equalizer made it 1-1 and briefly suggested an upset. Then Nico Schlotterbeck restored Germany’s lead, and the floodgates opened. Kai Havertz scored twice, Felix Nmecha added a brace, and substitute Deniz Undav scored one and set up two more. The final score could have been worse. It was a ruthless reminder that Germany treats World Cup openers — especially against smaller nations — as target practice.

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