SPORTS
Unbelievable Mistakes: How Isak, Gyokeres, and Bergvall Ruined Sweden’s World Cup Dreams!
Published
2 weeks agoon
By
OBS
For the first time in the history of the men’s national team, Sweden have sacked their manager. There have been departures after tournaments and contracts left unrenewed after a disappointing season. But never has the Swedish FA felt the need to fire its head coach in the middle of a qualifying campaign, until now.
Jon Dahl Tomasson has gone after overseeing an unmitigated disaster. Sweden are bottom of Group B with one point from four games and, barring a miraculous set of results, they will not be at the 2026 World Cup.
Last month, Sweden drew their opening game 2-2 in Slovenia, having twice let the lead slip. Still, it was a point on the board with the group minnows next. They went to Kosovo, ranked 99 in the world, who repeatedly countered behind Tomasson’s sluggish back three. Sweden had 69 per cent possession and lost 2-0.
No panic yet, but now they really needed to win, or at the very least draw, the next game against Group B favourites Switzerland in Stockholm. The Swiss dominated the ball and had plenty of shots – but Sweden created the clearest chances. Alexander Isak hit the post at the end of a flowing move, and then teed up Lucas Bergvall for a tap-in open goal, only to watch in horror as the Tottenham midfielder contrived to miskick the ball from six yards. At the other end, goalkeeper Robin Olsen fumbled a straight shot into his goal, and Sweden lost 2-0.
One point from three games, but at least the qualifying campaign was still salvageable with the visit of Kosovo on Monday night. This, finally, would be lift-off on the road to the World Cup. Isak again started in a luxury front two with Arsenal’s Viktor Gyokeres while captain Victor Lindelof returned to defence, but the victors on the night were Kosovo in a worryingly comfortable 1-0 win.
So Sweden are cooked and so is Tomasson. The FA’s football director, Kim Kallstrom, said after the defeat: “We have one point after four games, so we need to step back and think and analyse a little in peace and quiet.” Which, in Swedish culture, is not a good sign.
Tomasson had been castigated in the media, first for not utilising his substitutes and then for using the wrong ones; for committing to a 3-5-2 that hasn’t worked; for a bizarre decision to keep hidden his starting lineup before last night’s match with Kosovo so that his own players were left in the dark until less than two hours before kick-off.
It meant that Daniel Svensson, usually a left-wingback for Borussia Dortmund, learnt he was playing in central midfield at short notice. Asked if he was surprised by his role, he said: “Well, a little bit. I know that Jon thinks I can play in several positions, but wingback is probably my first position that I play in the club. I know that I can play [in midfield] but it wasn’t like I expected to start there.”
Had he at least trained there? “No, not directly.”
Tomasson might rue small turning points like the ball hitting the wrong side of the post, some individual errors, Bergvall’s malfunction. He tried to push the blame towards the Swedish FA, suggesting he was directed to play the type of attacking football that he implemented at Blackburn and Malmo, the implication being that he was asked to prioritise style over substance. The Swedish FA’s technical director Caroline Sjoblom denied this, telling Aftonbladet: “There has been no order that we should play ‘modern football’. Instead, we should play football that will win matches and hopefully take us to the World Cup.”
But while the Swedish media has focused on their Danish manager, social media has focused its criticism on the star player. Isak’s summer playing transfer games with Newcastle ultimately provoked the Liverpool move he so badly wanted. But there can be no doubt that it has impacted his national team’s World Cup qualifying campaign.
|
Team |
Pld |
W |
D |
L |
GF |
GA |
GD |
Pts |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Switzerland |
4 |
3 |
1 |
0 |
9 |
0 |
9 |
10 |
|
Kosovo |
4 |
2 |
1 |
1 |
3 |
4 |
-1 |
7 |
|
Slovenia |
4 |
0 |
3 |
1 |
2 |
5 |
-3 |
3 |
|
Sweden |
4 |
0 |
1 |
3 |
2 |
7 |
-5 |
1 |
After spending the entirety of Newcastle’s preseason on the picket line, Isak completed his life-changing transfer to Liverpool for £125m on deadline day, so it is safe to assume his mind wasn’t necessarily on dismantling Slovenia in a qualifier four days later. Tomasson chose to leave Isak on the bench – much to the delight of Liverpool manager Arne Slot – and Slovenia pinched a point with a 90th-minute equaliser. A fully fit Isak would have been the best player on the pitch – and it is not much of a stretch to imagine he would have been a game-changer in a match of fine margins.
Isak came off the bench in Kosovo a few days later and missed a big chance late in the game. The entire event was something of an Isak circus; the questions around the match were all about Liverpool’s new striker – his fitness, his transfer saga, his side of the story. “Not everyone has the full picture, but that’s something for another day,” he said after the game, a quote that went around the world. Meanwhile, his national team were toiling.
By the time this second international break came around, Isak had at least started a couple of Premier League games for Liverpool. But when he joined up with the national team, Tomasson was still not getting the same ruthless Isak as Newcastle enjoyed last season, still without a full 90 minutes under his belt in mid-October, having scored only one goal all season. By contrast, as gleeful Newcastle fans have been pointing out, Nick Woltemade scored Germany’s winner against Northern Ireland last night, his sixth goal of a fruitful season.
Sweden are no strangers to egotists. This is a national team which endured an often tortured relationship with Zlatan Ibrahimovic, so desperate for his goals and aura that managers and the media put up with the melodrama. He retired and then announced he was going to play in the tournament, and no one could stop him. Sweden arguably improved when Ibrahimovic finally departed the stage before the 2018 World Cup, a team galvanised by the absence of their narcissistic leader.
But Ibrahimovic delivered memorable moments and a shed-load of goals, many of which were crucial. Isak is a different character but could be accused of being just as self-absorbed, at least for a summer. He has yet to fully deliver on his talent in a Sweden shirt, with only 12 competitive goals, and he added no more to that tally across these two-and-a-bit games.
Isak might well point to the underwhelming performances of his teammates over recent weeks, like the error-prone goalkeepers, Malmo’s veteran Olsen and Stoke City’s Viktor Johansson. The three-man defence in front of them has been meek and messy in the goals they have conceded – five years on, Sweden have still not managed to replace the leadership of their warrior captain Andreas Granqvist.
Then there is Isak’s strike partner, Gyokeres, who has been utterly impotent in this qualifying campaign. He has mustered only two shots on target in the four games, of which he has played every minute. Tomasson had that classic problem of international football where talent is spread unevenly across the squad. He has defenders and midfielders plying their trade in the middle reaches of Allsvenskan or at the foot of the Premier League, and yet possesses two of the best No 9s in the world.
Tomasson’s solution was to pair these very similar profiles together but it didn’t work. Isak has been half-baked and Gyokeres has been terrible. Add in the injury to Dejan Kulusevski, who hasn’t played at all in this campaign, and it has left Sweden lacking the cutting edge needed to escape from a very escapable group. Four games, 10 shots on target, two goals and one point. The first 48-nation World Cup is on the horizon, and Sweden almost certainly won’t be in it.
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South Africa’s Stunning Comeback: First World Cup Qualifying in 16 Years! Can Nigeria Snatch a Last-Minute Playoff Chance?
Published
2 weeks agoon
October 16, 2025By
OBS
South Africa have qualified for their first World Cup since hosting the tournament 16 years ago, although they had Nigeria partially to thank for their progress.
South Africa beat Rwanda 3-0 in Nelspruit to finish first in Group C as Benin, who had a two-point lead going into the final round of fixtures, tumbled from top place to third in the standings after being thumped 4-0 by Nigeria in Uyo.
Victor Osimhen grabbed a hat-trick to keep Nigeria’s hopes alive as they seek to advance to a playoff next month for the four best runners-up from the nine African qualifying groups.
South Africa finished on 18 points, with Nigeria runners-up ahead of Benin on goal difference as both ended with 17 points.
South Africa had three points deducted last month after being found guilty of fielding a suspended player in an earlier qualifier in March, a mistake they admitted.
But that will be largely forgotten now as South Africa qualified for the first time since they hosted the finals in 2010.
Thalente Mbatha scored after five minutes, and Oswin Appollis netted the second in the 21st minute to put South Africa on their way. Striker Evidence Makgopa made it 3-0 in the 72nd minute with a header from a corner.
For Nigeria, Osimhen opened his account in the third minute from Samuel Chukwueze’s through pass and the same player then crossed for the striker to head home a second in the 37th minute.
He completed his hat-trick soon after halftime, heading home a chipped pass from Moses Simon, but the best goal was the last — thrashed in on the volley by Frank Onyeka.
Algeria secured qualification last week and were hoping to celebrate in front of their fans in Tizi Ouzou on Tuesday, but made heavy weather of it and needed two late penalties from Mohammed Amoura to beat Uganda 2-1.
Amoura went top of the scoring charts in the African qualifiers with 10 goals as Algeria finished their Group G campaign with 25 points.
They handed a debut in goal to Luca Zidane, the son of France World Cup winner Zinedine Zidane, but he was beaten after six minutes as Steven Mukwala gave Uganda a shock lead.
Reuters
SPORTS
Heimir Hallgrimsson Aware of World Cup Challenge Ahead After Armenia Victory: What’s Next?
Published
2 weeks agoon
October 15, 2025By
OBS
Heimir Hallgrimsson admits the Republic of Ireland may need to do something special against Portugal next month if they are to make it to next summer’s World Cup finals.
Ireland’s relief at a hard-fought 1-0 Group F victory over 10-man Armenia was tempered by the news of Hungary’s late equaliser which means they will have to at least deny Cristiano Ronaldo and company at the Aviva Stadium next month before targeting victory in Budapest three days later.
Asked if the 2-2 draw in Lisbon had changed anything, Hallgrimsson said: “Not really, it doesn’t change anything. We always knew that we needed to go to Hungary and have a win there.
“This looks like we need a point against Portugal, or Armenia to do us a favour in Yerevan. We all see that this Armenian team is no roll-over. There’s a big heart, there’s aggression and a spirit that is noticeable.”
Evan Ferguson’s 70th-minute header – his fourth goal in five competitive games for his country – ultimately sealed a vital win at the Aviva Stadium which could, and perhaps should, have been more comfortable after Armenia skipper Tigran Barseghyan’s 52nd-minute dismissal for a headbutt on Finn Azaz.
Ireland were largely passive and uninspired during a lukewarm first half but, aided and abetted by Barseghyan’s premature exit, forced their way across the finishing line to fulfil their head coach’s pre-match prophesy.
Hallgrimsson said: “Listen, we said before this camp we would take a scrappy 1-0 win and it probably was kind of a scrappy 1-0 win, so we can’t be unhappy.
“We’ve been complaining about the second game syndrome – we must be happy that we won the second game; we’ve been complaining about conceding early – we didn’t concede early, we didn’t concede at all, so we kept a clean sheet, that’s a good step.
“We’ll take the positives and carry on to the next window. It’s just a new dawn, it’s a new day next window – this result today doesn’t matter at all.
“We just needed the three points to be alive and have a chance, that’s number one, so we cannot be reading too much into that performance today.
“It was always going to be a tough match for us – we needed to win – and again it’s going to be tough, just a different opponent, players playing higher quality next time.”
Armenia boss Yegishe Melikyan admitted Barseghyan’s rush of blood had cost his side dear, but refused to condemn his indiscipline.
Melikyan said: “Of course, the red card changed the game. It was a mistake.
“He took responsibility. He said sorry to the whole dressing room. But, if a player makes a mistake, it is also my mistake and for that I apologise.
“If there was no red card and we played 11 v 11, I think we could have got a good result. I thought we could have won, but we must go forward and I think we can get good results in the near future.”
SPORTS
Wales Sensation Jess Fishlock Shocks Fans with Surprise International Retirement: What This Means for the Future!
Published
2 weeks agoon
October 15, 2025By
OBS
Wales’ record goalscorer Jess Fishlock has announced her retirement from international football after next week’s friendly against Australia.
The 38-year-old Seattle Reign midfielder, who has scored 48 goals for her country, will play her 166th and final international match against the Matildas at Cardiff City Stadium on 25 October.
Fishlock said: “After 19 years and the most incredible journey of proudly representing my country, I have made the decision that the match against Australia will be my last one in the red of Cymru.
“From kicking my first ball with my brothers in Llanrumney, football has been in my blood.
“When I had my debut against Switzerland in Kloten in 2006, never did I imagine I would have the honour of representing my Cymru more than 150 times. Every minute was a pleasure, a privilege, and an honour.”
Having made her senior international debut against Switzerland in 2006, Fishlock became the first male or female footballer to make 100 appearances for Wales, against Northern Ireland in 2017 and marked her milestone by scoring in a 3-1 win.
She became her country’s leading international scorer in July 2024, notching her 45th goal in a 2-0 European Championship qualifying win against Kosovo.
After helping Wales qualify for their first major women’s tournament at the 2025 European Championship, Fishlock became the oldest-ever scorer in the women’s competition against France, aged 38 years and 176 days.
“The Euros was the pinnacle of my football career, seeing the dragon on the world stage for the first time will be a memory that will stay with me for a lifetime,” she said.
“To all the players and staff, past and present, diolch (thanks). It has been an incredible journey. The team has always felt like a family and after all the good and bad times, we finally achieved what we always dreamed of.”
Fishlock, who began her career at hometown club Cardiff and has had spells at Glasgow City, Melbourne Victory, Frankfurt and Lyon among others, also thanked her wife, former Seattle team-mate Tziarra King, friends and family for their support.
She added: “I love you all. Without the support you have all shown, without you getting me through the difficult moments, I never would have achieved what I achieved.
“To my Mum, a woman whose love and guidance allowed me to chase and reach my dreams. You believed in me before I believed in myself.
“To my wife Tziarra, for learning about our beautiful country and always supporting me and us. Thank you.”
PA
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