Group B · World Cup 2026

Bosnia & Herzegovina
3-1

LIVE

Qatar

Wednesday 24 June at 20:00 UK time · Lumen Field, Seattle

Bosnia & Herzegovina vs Qatar Live: World Cup 2026

Live Updates

  • 82'Ermin Mahmić
  • 82'Dženis Burnić on for Kerim Alajbegović
  • 80'Ermin Mahmić
  • 79'Ahmed Alaaeldin on for Edmilson Junior
  • 79'Mohamed Naceur Almanai on for Ahmed Fathi
  • 78'Ahmed Fathi
  • 72'Almoez Ali on for Karim Boudiaf
  • 64'Ermin Mahmić on for Edin Džeko
  • 63'Dennis Hadžikadunić on for Nikola Katić
  • 56'Ahmed Al-Ganehi on for Hassan Al Haydos
  • 46'Amar Memić on for Arjan Malić
  • 46'Benjamin Tahirović on for Ivan Šunjić
  • 46'Abdelaziz Hatem on for Jassem Gaber Abdulsallam
  • 42'Hassan Al Haydos
  • 34'Mahmud Abunada (og)
  • 29'Kerim Alajbegović
  • 82'E. Mahmic
  • 82'D. Burnic on for K. Alajbegovic
  • 80'E. Mahmic
  • 79'M. Al Mannai on for A. Fathi
  • 79'A. Alaaeldin on for Edmilson Junior
  • 78'A. Fathi
  • 72'A. Ali on for K. Boudiaf
  • 34'M. Abunada (og)
  • 64'E. Mahmic on for E. Dzeko
  • 63'D. Hadzikadunic on for N. Katic
  • 56'A. Al Ganehi on for H. Al Haydos
  • 46'A. Hatem on for J. Gaber
  • 46'A. Memic on for A. Malic
  • 46'B. Tahirovic on for I. Sunjic
  • 42'H. Al Haydos
  • 34'S. Al Brake (og)
  • 29'K. Alajbegovic

Events update about once a minute. The full match report and player ratings publish shortly after full time.

Confirmed Lineups

Bosnia & Herzegovina line up in a flat 4-4-2 under Sergej Barbarez, a shape that prioritises defensive compactness in midfield while giving Ermedin Demirović and Edin Džeko a clear partnership up front. At 38, Džeko's inclusion is the headline: Barbarez has decided this is exactly the occasion to call on his record scorer, and the veteran striker's hold-up play could be decisive if Bosnia park in their own half at any point. The absence of Toni Muharemović through injury means Nikola Katić and Stjepan Radeljić start together at centre-back, a pairing that will need to be organised against Qatar's movement.

Julen Lopetegui sets Qatar up in a 4-3-3, with Akram Afif and Edmilson Junior flanking Hassan Al Haydos. Two Qatar absentees, Homam Ahmed and Assim Madibo, sit on the injury list, which goes some way to explaining the midfield three selected. Almoez Ali, a consistent goal threat, is named among the substitutes.

The key matchup is Sead Kolašinac at left-back against whoever drifts to Bosnia's right side from Qatar's front three. Kolašinac is experienced enough, but Afif in particular will look to exploit the space behind him if Bosnia's wide midfielder, Kerim Alajbegović, pushes on.

Bosnia & Herzegovina

(4-4-2)

Coach: Sergej Barbarez

1Nikola VasiljG
24Arjan MalićD
18Nikola KatićD
21Stjepan RadeljićD
5Sead KolašinacD
20Esmir BajraktarevićM
14Ivan ŠunjićM
13Ivan BašićM
19Kerim AlajbegovićM
10Ermedin DemirovićF
11Edin DžekoF

Subs: Martin Zlomislić, Mladen Jurkas, Nihad Mujakić, Dennis Hadžikadunić, Amar Dedić, Amir Hadžiahmetović, Armin Gigović, Benjamin Tahirović, Dženis Burnić, Ermin Mahmić, Amar Memić, Jovo Lukić, Samed Baždar, Haris Tabaković

Qatar

(4-3-3)

Coach: Julen Lopetegui

1Mahmud AbunadaG
2Pedro MiguelD
16Boualem KhoukhiD
4Issa LayeD
18Sultan Al-BrakeD
5Jassem Gaber AbdulsallamM
20Ahmed FathiM
12Karim BoudiafM
10Hassan Al HaydosF
11Akram AfifF
8Edmilson JuniorF

Subs: Meshaal Barsham, Salah Zakaria, Lucas Mendes, Al-Hashmi Al-Hussain, Ayoub Al Oui, Almoez Ali, Mohamed Naceur Almanai, Abdelaziz Hatem, Ahmed Al-Ganehi, Tahsin Mohammed Jamshid, Mohammed Muntari, Ahmed Alaaeldin, Yusuf Abdurisag

How We Previewed It

Bosnia & Herzegovina and Qatar arrive at Lumen Field on Wednesday evening in precisely the same position: one point from two games, one foot already on the plane home. Only a win will do for either side, which makes this the rare Group B fixture where the stakes are clear and the margin for error is zero.

Group B has belonged to Canada and Switzerland. Both nations sit on four points after two games, and barring a catastrophic collapse in their parallel fixture, one or both will advance regardless of what happens in Seattle. That leaves the bottom two scrapping over what is, in all likelihood, a single remaining place in the last sixteen, though even that depends on other results breaking kindly. Bosnia and Herzegovina, with a goal difference of minus three, are marginally better placed than Qatar, whose defence has conceded seven times already in this tournament. One goal in two matches tells its own story at the other end for Qatar.

These two sides have never met in a competitive international fixture. There is no head-to-head history to lean on, no psychological edge carried in from a previous encounter. Everything is decided fresh on the Lumen Field pitch, which is perhaps the most level footing either team could hope for given the circumstances.

On team news, both squads report no fresh absences ahead of kick-off, which at least means each manager can pick from a full complement and plan without the disruption of late changes.

Bosnia and Herzegovina will need their attacking players to do considerably better than they managed against Canada and Switzerland, while Qatar must find a way to be more resilient at the back. A team that has conceded seven goals in the group stage has rarely looked like a side capable of winning a knockout match, but survival to the last sixteen would, for Qatar, represent a considerable improvement on their 2022 home tournament experience.

The data leans toward a shared outcome or a Bosnian win, with Bosnia and Herzegovina given a 45 per cent chance of victory, the draw also rated at 45 per cent, and Qatar's prospects of three points assessed at just 10 per cent. The model also points toward goals, making a low-scoring, cautious affair the less likely outcome. Whatever happens, neither side can afford to treat the first hour as a warm-up.

By the Football IQ Sports Desk. Reports are generated from verified match data and corrected as final statistics settle.