Skip to main content
Come Fan with UsSaturday, June 20, 2026

How does a drawing of lots work?

England and Belgium potentially face a rarely-used tiebreaker method to decide who wins Group G.

The 2018 World Cup has been intensely entertaining for how close so many groups have come, including the elimination of Senegal earlier on Thursday on fair play tiebreakers. But England and Belgium may go further than that, as a draw in their last Group G match and the potential of ending even on the Fair Play tiebreaker that they’re separated in by a single point in would exhaust their tiebreaker options. That means that they would have to go to the drawing of lots, something not used in the World Cup since 1990.

What can happen

Assuming that England and Belgium do have to go to the drawing of lots, at roughly 11 p.m. local time (4 p.m. ET) immediately following the game, the FIFA Organising Committee will meet in the Luzhniki Stadium press conference room with a bowl and balls filled with slips of paper that have either England or Belgium printed on them. In a live stream on the FIFA website, they’ll randomly draw a ball out, and whichever nation’s name is pulled out of that ball will be declared the winner of their group.

Some of the tension will come out of the moment because both teams will advance — the draw is merely to determine the winner. The only time the drawing of lots has been used in the World Cup itself was in 1990, when the Republic of Ireland and the Netherlands finished even on every tiebreaker in their group, and Ireland were drawn as the second-place team with a kinder knockout round draw, facing a Romania team that they beat on penalties. The Dutch thus finished in third place in their group, advancing to a knockout round match against Germany that they lost.

In 1954, a drawing of lots was used to determine which of Spain or Turkey would advance to the World Cup itself, after the two teams were even in qualifying and then drew their tiebreaker match. A blindfolded 14 year old Italian boy who’s father worked at the stadium the tiebreaker was held at was tasked with pulling a ball out of the bowl, and he selected Turkey as the team to advance.

See More:

More in Soccer

Soccer
USMNT World Cup schedule: How to watch every U.S. match, scores, and moreUSMNT World Cup schedule: How to watch every U.S. match, scores, and more
Soccer

How to watch every USMNT match at the 2026 FIFA World Cup

By Mark Schofield
Soccer
Christian Pulisic injury updates: UMSNT star out for Australia World Cup matchChristian Pulisic injury updates: UMSNT star out for Australia World Cup match
Soccer

The U.S. star is day-to-day with a calf injury in the World Cup. Here’s the latest.

By Mark Schofield
Soccer
USMNT playing for Unofficial World Championship against AustraliaUSMNT playing for Unofficial World Championship against Australia
Soccer

Qualifying for the knockout stage could come with an extra bonus on Friday.

By Bernd Buchmasser
Soccer
USA vs. Australia World Cup preview: Analysis and tacticsUSA vs. Australia World Cup preview: Analysis and tactics
Soccer
Raúl Rangel’s ‘save of the tournament’ helps Mexico win World Cup Group ARaúl Rangel’s ‘save of the tournament’ helps Mexico win World Cup Group A
Soccer

Mexico keeper Raúl Rangel made a pair of spectacular saves to help preserve a 1-0 win over South Korea

By Mark Schofield
Soccer
World Cup 2026: What are the scenarios for Group A?World Cup 2026: What are the scenarios for Group A?
Soccer

This is who’s in good shape to advance in Group A during the 2026 World Cup.

By Mark Schofield