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.