Norway fans gather after their World Cup quarterfinal match against England in front of the Royal Palace in Oslo
Norway fans gather after their World Cup quarterfinal match against England in front of the Royal Palace in OsloPhoto: Reuters

World Cup dream ends but party goes on as proud Norwegians salute historic run

Updated on

While the sting of defeat by England was palpable, thousands of Norwegian fans poured onto the streets of Oslo in ​the early hours of Sunday to transform their final World ‌Cup night into a celebration of a historic tournament run.

Despite being 2 a.m. local time following a gallant 2-1 quarter-final loss against England after extra time in Miami, ​fans clad in red, white and blue marched toward the ​Royal Palace from around Oslo for one final "Viking row," the ⁠thunderous ritual that made the Norwegian supporters tournament darlings.

"We are proud ​of them. Thanks for the great memories," one fan told public broadcaster ​NRK while joining the crowds to celebrate a run that even four years ago would have been dismissed as unlikely. Norway had never won a knockout-stage match ​in the World Cup before this year's finals.

Norway fans gather after their World Cup quarterfinal match against England in front of the Royal Palace in Oslo
Norway question Bellingham equaliser as FIFA rejects cable contact claim

To an outsider, there ​was little sign the team had lost.

The celebrations filled the night air, with Norway's ‌journey ⁠leaving fans filled ambitious for the future.

Chants of "We are gonna win the Euros in two years" - to the tune of Twisted Sister's "We're Not Gonna Take It" - rang out in the darkness as Norwegian delicacy brown ​cheese was handed ​out.

Norway fans gather after their World Cup quarterfinal match against England in front of the Royal Palace in Oslo
Haaland fever grips the World Cup as Norway rally behind their Viking hero

Another fan ⁠at the Palace square did not take the defeat too badly. "It's national pride, we are celebrating something we ​did together," he said, as the national anthem echoed ​through the ⁠night, flares lit up the sky and fireworks crackled over the tens of thousands filling the main thoroughfare of Karl Johan.

"It has been an ⁠amazing ​journey. The Viking row has gone around ​the world and we have done everything and more than we could dream of," another ​Norway supporter said.

Daily Waadaa
dailywaadaa.com