Opinions, analysis and commentary

Bosnia returns to the World Cup after 12 years, with Edin Džeko managing a shoulder injury at 40 and a farewell story that writes itself. But Group B asks a harder question. It asks whether Ermedin Demirović can finally convert Stuttgart form into international goals, and whether 21-year-old Esmir Bajraktarević, the man who scored the decisive penalty against Italy to send Bosnia to North America, can replicate that composure across three group-stage fixtures in 12 days.
At 40, Džeko arrives as Bosnia’s all-time record scorer with 73 goals in 148 caps. He scored six times in qualifying and delivered an 86th-minute equaliser against Wales in the playoff semi-final before a shoulder injury forced him off during the final against Italy. Bosnia still won 4-1 on penalties. He is managing that injury into the tournament, creating real questions about full 90-minute availability across three fixtures. Bosnia’s opponents will know this, and how much of the attacking load Džeko can carry in Group B is the reason Demirović and Bajraktarević matter so much.
Bajraktarević is the most compelling name in Bosnia’s squad because nothing about his path was predictable. Born in Appleton, Wisconsin, he was a US international before switching allegiance to Bosnia in 2024 and now has 15 senior caps. At PSV Eindhoven, he won consecutive Eredivisie titles and contributed four goals and four assists in 28 league appearances in 2025-26. He started seven of Bosnia’s ten qualifying matches yet created 13 chances, joint-most of any outfield player in the campaign. His defining moment came on March 31, 2026, in Zenica, converting the decisive kick in the 4-1 shootout win over Italy. At 21, he has already shaped the most important result in Bosnian football in over a decade.
The table maps Bosnia’s attacking depth beyond Džeko, and one pattern stands out: only Demirović brings consistent elite-level club scoring.
| Player | Age | Club | 2025-26 Stats | Caps/Goals | Role |
| Edin Džeko | 40 | Schalke 04 | 6G, 3A (2. Bundesliga) | 148 / 73G | Captain/target man |
| Ermedin Demirović | 28 | VfB Stuttgart | 12G, 3A (Bundesliga) | 40 / 4G | First-choice striker |
| Esmir Bajraktarević | 21 | PSV Eindhoven | 4G, 4A (Eredivisie) | 15 / 1G* | Wide attacker |
| Haris Tabaković | 30 | B. Mönchengladbach | 9G, 4A (Bundesliga) | 15 / 3G | Backup striker |
| Samed Baždar | 26 | Jagiellonia | 12G, 4A (Ekstraklasa) | 11 / 2G | Attacking rotation |
| Kerim Alajbegović | 20 | RB Salzburg | 5G, 3A (Bundesliga A) | 8 / 1G | Young forward |
| Jovo Lukić | 23 | Univ. Cluj | 11G, 4A (Liga I) | 5 / 0G | Depth/rotation |
No Bosnia forward other than Džeko and Demirović scored more than once from open play across all ten qualifying and playoff matches. The rest of the pool lacks either consistent top-flight experience or proven senior international output.
Demirović’s club numbers demand respect. He finished 2025-26 with 12 goals and three assists in 25 Bundesliga appearances, adding a DFB-Pokal medal the previous season. Across 40 senior caps for Bosnia, however, he has scored only four international goals, roughly one every ten games. His hold-up play, aerial ability, and movement off the ball make him valuable regardless, but Bosnia needs him to score in Group B. They cannot reduce their reliance on a 40-year-old captain managing a shoulder injury unless Demirović converts his Stuttgart form to the international stage.
Bosnia’s draw, Canada, Switzerland, and Qatar, gives them a realistic chance to advance from a World Cup group for the first time. Switzerland is the strongest opponents, Canada carry co-host momentum, and Qatar is the most beatable side on paper. Three matches in 12 days is too much to ask of a 40-year-old with a shoulder injury; the goals must come from elsewhere. Bajraktarević already proved he can deliver when it counts most: the Italy penalty was a composed decision under maximum pressure, not a lucky kick. Demirović has the pedigree but needs to close the gap between Stuttgart and the international stage. This is the Bosnia-Herzegovina FIFA World Cup 2026 next-generation moment, and Bosnia reaches the round of 16; leave it, and the Džeko era ends without an answer.
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Who is Bosnia’s best player at the 2026 World Cup?
Edin Džeko remains Bosnia’s captain and record scorer with 73 international goals in 148 caps, but Esmir Bajraktarević of PSV Eindhoven is the squad’s most exciting emerging talent. Bajraktarević scored the decisive penalty against Italy to send Bosnia to the tournament and created 13 chances across qualifying.
What group is Bosnia-Herzegovina in at the FIFA World Cup 2026?
Bosnia is in Group B alongside Canada, Switzerland, and Qatar, opening against Canada on June 12 in Toronto. Switzerland is the strongest opponent, while Qatar is the most beatable side in the group.
Will Edin Džeko play at the 2026 World Cup?
Yes, Džeko was named in Bosnia’s 26-man squad as captain, though he is managing a shoulder injury from the playoff final against Italy. His availability for a full 90 minutes across three group fixtures remains a genuine concern.
Who scored Bosnia’s qualifying penalty against Italy?
Esmir Bajraktarević converted the decisive penalty in Bosnia’s 4-1 shootout win over Italy in the playoff final on March 31, 2026, in Zenica. It was his only international goal to date.
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