Yes, if a team loses in the World Cup, they are eliminated from the tournament.
Teams get eliminated in the World Cup by losing matches in the group stage or knockout rounds. If a team loses enough matches, they will not advance to the next stage of the tournament and will be eliminated from the competition.
After all of the group stage matches have been played, the top two teams with the most points from each group advance to the knock out stage of the tournament. The two bottom teams from each group are eliminated from the tournament. The rest of the tournament is a single elimination knock out tournament where the last standing team is awarded the world cup.
If by games you mean MATCHES, then four. 1st round, quarterfinal, semifinal, final.
When they loose, a team at the World Cup is out of the tournament. It is a single-elimination tournament. The only exception is in the semi-final round where the loosing teams play each other for third place.
In a double elimination tournament, each participant must lose two matches to be eliminated. The structure typically involves two brackets: a winners' bracket and a losers' bracket. A team that loses in the winners' bracket drops to the losers' bracket, while a team that loses in the losers' bracket is eliminated. The final match usually pits the winner of the winners' bracket against the winner of the losers' bracket, and if the latter wins, a decisive match is held to determine the champion.
Based on stats, Algeria. Althought they did not finish with 3 loses, but they did not score a single goal in the tournament.
63
A half-life of a radioisotope is similar to a sporting tournament in which the losing team is eliminated in that after each round of Tennis Grand Slam, half of the players are eliminated than half of the remaining players are eliminated until the player who wins the title, in the same way the half-life of the radioisotope 's life is divided in to half until it gets stable.
Kentucky has 100 wins and 69 loses for a 690. winning %
In a double elimination bracket, teams or players have to lose twice before they are eliminated from the tournament. Each match consists of two rounds: the winners' bracket and the losers' bracket. If a team loses in the winners' bracket, they move to the losers' bracket for a second chance. If they lose again in the losers' bracket, they are out of the tournament. This format allows for a fairer competition and gives teams a chance to recover from a single loss.
Germany
Davies