Switzerland’s 2006 World Cup campaign remains one of football’s great paradoxes: a team eliminated in the Round of 16 without conceding a single goal. On 26 June in Cologne, national optimism peaked as the Nati faced Ukraine after topping Group G with seven points and clean sheets against France, Togo and South Korea. Expectations were high, yet the match drifted into a tense stalemate. Alexander Frei struck the bar, but neither side broke through across 120 minutes. In the shootout, Switzerland collapsed as Streller, Barnetta and Cabanas all missed, sealing a 3‑0 defeat despite Pascal Zuberbühler saving Andriy Shevchenko’s opener.
The next day, the squad returned to a heroes’ welcome, celebrated for their unity and defensive perfection. Since 1954, Switzerland have repeatedly fallen at the last‑16 stage, but a new generation led by Granit Xhaka hopes to end the long‑standing curse in 2026, backed by unwavering national support.