Messi, Morocco and same old story as Europe dominates quarter-finals in expanded World Cup
The rest of the world has seen its share of spots shoot up, but this tournament could still end up with all-European semi-finals

More World Cup teams, but same World Cup story.
This edition in North America started with 48 teams; it is now down to eight, with six of those from Europe, with the exceptions being Lionel Messi’s Argentina, the reigning champions, and Morocco.
And unless the remaining African side pulls off a series of surprising outcomes over the final two weeks, the champions will again come from Europe or South America.
A tournament that has been around for almost a century – the first World Cup was in 1930 – has been contested on 22 previous occasions. The champions: 12 from Europe, 10 from South America, zero from the rest of the globe combined.
The expansion of the World Cup has offered more of a chance to continents that were previously under-represented at the tournament, but a glance at the quarter-final line-up tells a familiar tale.
With France, Spain, Belgium, England, Norway and Switzerland still in contention, there could be an all-European semi-final line-up, like in 2018.