Scotland secures first World Cup win since 1990, beats Haiti 1-0

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Scotland hadn’t won a World Cup match since Margaret Thatcher was still in office. That changed on June 13, 2026, when John McGinn’s deflected strike in the 28th minute gave the Tartan Army a 1-0 victory over Haiti at Boston Stadium, ending a 36-year wait for a World Cup win.

The result puts Scotland at the top of Group C after Brazil and Morocco played to a 1-1 draw earlier the same day. For a nation that hadn’t even appeared at a World Cup since 1998, sitting atop a group that includes Brazil is the kind of sentence that would’ve gotten you laughed out of a Glasgow pub two years ago.

One goal, 36 years of weight lifted

Scotland’s last World Cup victory came against Sweden in 1990. Since then, they failed to qualify for seven consecutive tournaments before finally breaking through for the 2026 edition. That 28-year absence from the world’s biggest football stage makes this result feel less like a routine group-stage win and more like a national exhale.

The Group C picture now looks surprisingly favorable for Scotland. With Brazil and Morocco canceling each other out, Scotland’s three points give them sole possession of first place heading into matchday two.

The crypto angle: Scotland’s $SFA fan token gets a boost

Scotland’s football association launched the $SFA fan token on Socios.com in May 2026, just weeks before the tournament kicked off. The token launched at $1 with a total supply of 20 million, giving it a fully diluted valuation of $20 million.

The $SFA token’s partnerships with Kraken and ADI suggest the Scottish FA is taking the crypto play seriously rather than treating it as a quick cash grab. Fan tokens are not equity in a football team. They don’t entitle holders to revenue sharing or governance over anything meaningful.

What this means for investors and fans watching Group C

The $SFA token’s $20 million FDV is modest by crypto standards. For context, larger clubs’ fan tokens have traded at valuations several times that size during major tournaments.

Fan tokens are sentiment-driven assets in the purest sense. The correlation between on-pitch results and token price is about as direct as it gets in crypto, which makes these tokens uniquely volatile during tournament windows.

Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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