Uzbekistan writes a World Cup line in history as Fayzullaev cancels out Colombia in Group K opener
Abbosbek Fayzullaev's equaliser gave Uzbekistan its first-ever goal at a men's World Cup finals, cancelling out Colombia in the Group K opener.

Abbosbek Fayzullaev tapped in Uzbekistan's first-ever goal at a men's World Cup final on 18 June 2026, cancelling out Colombia in the opening match of Group K at the tournament in North America. The strike, confirmed by BBC Sport at 03:53 UTC, came minutes after Colombia had taken the lead and was the loudest moment yet in a tournament that FIFA has spent four years selling as the most geographically expanded in its history.
For Tashkent the goal is not just a goal. Uzbekistan arrived at this World Cup as the lowest-ranked side in the field and as the first Central Asian team ever to qualify for the men's finals through a direct route. A draw against one of the South American game's traditional powers, on the opening night of their campaign, is a result that will be filed in federation archives for decades.
The game, in sequence
Colombia began the contest as the nominal favourite. The South Americans, who reached the 2022 quarter-finals in Qatar, were seeking to extend a record of qualification from every World Cup they have attended since 1998. According to BBC Sport's live coverage of the Group K fixture in the early hours of 18 June 2026 UTC, the opening goal for Colombia came first; Fayzullaev's equaliser followed. Telesur English's pre-kickoff broadcast at 01:46 UTC framed the match as Colombia's campaign opener and asked viewers which side they were backing; the answer on the night, on the scoreboard at least, was both.
The shape of the contest, on the limited reporting available from the broadcast partners, is the shape of any Group K opener between a South American side expected to dominate possession and a Central Asian side built to absorb pressure and strike on the break. Specific minute-by-minute detail beyond the two goals has not been disclosed in the source material Monexus reviewed; the live text on Sky Sports listed the fixture without a detailed match report at the time of writing.
Why this matters beyond the scoreline
Uzbekistan's first World Cup finals goal is a small data point in a much larger one. The 48-team format, introduced for the 2026 edition, was designed in part to widen the map of countries with skin in the game beyond the usual dozen or so that have monopolised the men's finals since the tournament went global. Uzbekistan's appearance, like those of Cape Verde, Jordan and Curaçao, is the proof point of that policy: more teams, more firsts.
For the Uzbekistan Football Association, the result is the latest milestone in a 15-year project that has methodically built the country's men's side from a mid-tier Asian nation into a side that won the CAFA Championship and now sits inside the world's top 50. The federation has invested heavily in youth academies and has been a notable beneficiary of the AFC's increased central funding for member associations. Colombia, by contrast, played this match under the kind of expectation that comes with a 1990s-era pedigree: Los Cafeteros have reached the World Cup knockout rounds in three of the last four editions.
A tournament that keeps trying to be bigger
FIFA's expansion to 48 teams has not been without controversy. European federations, in particular, warned that the dilution of quality would damage the brand. South American and African federals, by contrast, welcomed the additional slots as overdue recognition of football's centre of gravity outside Europe. The first match of Group K has offered both camps ammunition. Colombia's opener demonstrated the South American side's technical ceiling; Fayzullaev's equaliser demonstrated that the expansion slots have, in at least one match, delivered exactly the kind of competitive, narrative-rich contest the format was supposed to produce.
What remains unclear from the broadcast partners' coverage is how the Colombian federation has reacted to dropping points in the opening fixture. The sources available to Monexus do not include a post-match press conference transcript or a federative statement. The reporting gap is consistent with the early hours of a tournament in full swing: the goal, the result and the headline will travel; the colour from the mixed zone often arrives later.
What to watch next
Uzbekistan's next assignment in Group K, and Colombia's reaction, will determine whether the result in the opener is a footnote or a turning point. A side that scores its first World Cup goal against a South American heavyweight is a side that, on its tournament debut, has already justified the slot it was given. The rest of the group stage will test whether the moment in the early hours of 18 June 2026 UTC is the high-water mark or merely the opening shot.
Desk note: Monexus treated the goal as the lead because the historic framing — first-ever, against a South American heavyweight, on debut — sits at the top of the editorial interest. The wire leads available at this hour prioritised the live scoreline; this publication preferred the institutional milestone the result produced for the Uzbekistan federation.
Wire provenance
This editorial synthesis draws on the following public wire/social posts:
- https://x.com/telesurenglish/status/