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Jordan is eliminated, and Argentina has already topped Group J, but the football left to play in Dallas carries more interest than most dead rubbers deserve. Two group games have shown Al Nashama carry a genuine transition weapon built around one of the most direct wide players at this tournament. Against a rotated Albiceleste defence facing that pace together for the first time, there are real grounds for expecting at least one dangerous moment from the underdogs before the final whistle.
Against Austria, Mousa Al-Taamari completed 15 of 24 attempted dribbles, a 62.5% success rate rated the best by a World Cup debut nation since Iraq in 1986. Against Algeria, his cutback created Nizar Al-Rashdan’s opener. His stoppage-time solo run was Jordan’s clearest chance in their first match.
The pattern across both games is the same: Al-Taamari carries into wide channels, cuts inside left-footed, and either shoots or finds the arriving runner. He’s 29, plays for Rennes, scored seven goals with two assists in Asian qualifying, and produced seven goals and 11 assists in domestic football this season. For a side ranked 63rd in the world, that is a serious end product landing in tournament football at the right moment.
Al Nashama’s tactical model is not complicated. They sit compact, absorb pressure, then release Al-Taamari into space the instant possession turns over. They don’t need to dominate to score. One transition, one wide run, one arriving runner is enough.
Against Austria, which produced an xG of 0.53 from a game Jordan spent defending. Against Algeria, just one shot on target but an xG of 0.65, suggesting the chances they created had real quality behind them.
Argentina’s defensive record through the group stage is clean, but Saturday’s back line won’t be the one that earned it. A new centre-back and full-back pairing seeing Al-Taamari’s movement for the first time, in a match that means nothing to the table, is exactly the setup this transition approach is built to exploit.
Lionel Scaloni is expected to hand significant minutes to Marcos Senesi, Valentin Barco, Exequiel Palacios, Giuliano Simeone, and Jose Manuel Lopez. An eleven-day gap before the Round of 32 makes wholesale rotation logical, whatever Scaloni says publicly about the approach.
The problem rotation creates isn’t an individual quality. It’s familiarity. Senesi and a partner who haven’t defended together won’t have developed the understanding needed to track Al-Taamari’s late runs in behind. Barco at left-back will be operating in the exact wide channel Jordan has targeted twice. Argentina conceded nothing against Austria (2-0) or Algeria (3-0), but those clean sheets came with established pairings against sides without Jordan’s specific transition threat.
Jordan’s group stage numbers sit alongside one important historical footnote.
| Match | Result | Jordan Goals | Shots on Target | xG | Al-Taamari Involvement |
| vs Austria (Jun 16/17) | 1-3 L | 1 (Ali Olwan) | 4 | 0.53 | Stoppage-time solo run and shot |
| vs Algeria (Jun 22) | 1-2 L | 1 (Al-Rashdan) | 1 | 0.65 | Cutback assist for Al-Rashdan |
Note: per-player chance-creation totals for these matches were not confirmed in published records; figures reflect documented attacking actions credited to Al-Taamari in official match reports.
Jordan became the first debutant nation to score in each of their opening two World Cup games since Côte d’Ivoire in 2006. Both goals came from transition moves built around Al-Taamari’s wide-channel carrying. The defending collapsed both times, which is why they’re eliminated. But the attack found a way to score against two organised sides. That matters.
A nation debuting at the World Cup, having already scored twice, now facing the defending champion’s reserves in Dallas. The story writes itself if Al Nashama can find one more moment.
The conditions for it are structurally in place. Argentina’s unfamiliar back line hasn’t seen Al-Taamari’s pace. The Jordan vs Argentina FIFA World Cup 2026 counterattack setup doesn’t ask Jordan to win the match. It only asks for one turnover, one burst into that wide channel, and one clean finish. Al Nashama has delivered that sequence twice already at this tournament. There’s no tactical reason they can’t produce it one more time on Saturday.
Which Jordan player do you think is most likely to trouble Argentina on Saturday? Leave your pick in the comments.
FAQs
Can Jordan score against Argentina at the 2026 World Cup?
Yes, Jordan has scored in both their group games using a clear transition setup. Argentina’s rotated back line, facing Al-Taamari’s wide-channel pace for the first time, gives Al Nashama a genuine route to goal.
Who has been Jordan’s best player at the 2026 World Cup?
Al-Taamari has been directly involved in both of Jordan’s goals at the tournament. He completed 15 of 24 dribbles against Austria and set up the opener against Algeria with a cutback assist.
Has Argentina conceded a goal at the 2026 World Cup group stage?
No, Argentina kept clean sheets in both matches, beating Austria 2-0 and Algeria 3-0. Both results came with their first-choice defensive pairing, which is set to be rested against Al Nashama.
What are Al-Taamari’s stats for Rennes this season?
He scored seven goals and registered 11 assists for Rennes in domestic football this season. He also scored seven goals with two assists in Asian qualifying before the tournament.
What are Jordan’s group stage results at the 2026 World Cup?
Jordan lost 3-1 to Austria and 1-2 to Algeria, scoring in both. They became the first debutant nation to score in each of their opening two World Cup matches since Côte d’Ivoire in 2006.
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