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Norway celebrates national football team with massive turnout despite World Cup exit

July 14, 2026
2 mins read
Norway celebrates national football team with massive turnout despite World Cup exit

Norway fans celebrate World Cup team despite quarter-final exit

More than 100,000 fans flooded the streets of the Norwegian capital Oslo on Monday to give their soccer team a heroes’ welcome, transforming the heartbreak of their World Cup exit into a massive national celebration, reports BritPanorama.

A 2-1 extra-time defeat by England on Saturday brought Norway’s historic run to an end in the quarter-finals, shattering the Nordics’ dreams of a place in the last four. Nevertheless, the country celebrated its players’ achievements in the tournament.

Massive crowds under the Norwegian summer sun filled the grounds of the Royal Palace early on Monday afternoon, with an unofficial turnout estimated at over 100,000 people. The Norway squad was greeted with a traditional water cannon salute before commencing their homecoming parade.

The line of supporters quickly packed the palace square before stretching far down the main street, Karl Johans gate, as the squad first attended an audience with King Harald. “I have felt very proud, it has been amazing, I have been both at home and in Spain, and the atmosphere between the Norwegian people has been there all the time, so it has been unbelievable,” Norway fan Catherine Breiland told Reuters.

The team stepped out to greet the fans with the Royal Guard standing to attention behind them. Notably, striker Erling Haaland was absent from the final stage of the celebrations, having left early.

His departure meant he missed joining his teammates on the palace steps for one last “Viking row,” led by Crown Prince Haakon on the drums, with tens of thousands of fans gathered below. “Erling and Sander (Berge) had to catch their plane as our trip from the U.S. was delayed four hours,” coach Stale Solbakken explained as the squad prepared to continue the celebrations in an open-top bus parade around Oslo.

Crowds slowed the bus through central Oslo, forcing it to reverse at one point as police escorts struggled to carve out a path. Undeterred, Norway’s players celebrated with beer and waved as the festivities continued long into the night.

“The run the Norwegian team has had this year has been way beyond anything I’ve ever expected. I feel everybody in Norway should just honor the national team, which has done such an amazing job during this whole cup,” said Nicolai Sivesind, who traveled to Oslo to partake in World Cup events.

A moment of irony occurred when the parade was halted by low-hanging overhead cables. The players were forced to sit down to clear the obstruction before the double-decker bus could proceed. Earlier, Solbakken expressed his conviction that the ball hit a camera cable above the pitch just before Jude Bellingham scored England’s equaliser in the first half of the quarter-final. FIFA has repeatedly denied that the ball touched any wire before the goal.

Hours after the parade began, it completed the 1.3-km route at City Hall Square, where tens of thousands of patient supporters were still waiting to welcome the team. “I don’t think anyone had imagined this,” captain Martin Odegaard told Norwegian broadcaster NRK. “The support we have received in the USA and here at home in Norway has been beyond all expectations. It has been absolutely incredible to see.”

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