Opinions, analysis and commentary

Qatar is in Group B at the FIFA World Cup 2026 alongside Canada, Switzerland, and Bosnia and Herzegovina. Everything they can realistically achieve runs through one player. Akram Afif is not merely Qatar’s best option in attack; he is their only option capable of troubling three organised defences across three matches on June 13, 18, and 24. Without him creating, Qatar doesn’t score. Without scoring, they simply don’t compete. The mathematics are that blunt, and the history is that uncomfortable.
Their last competitive fixture was the Arab Cup in December 2025, where they scored just one goal across three group-stage games. March 2026 friendlies were cancelled, replaced with a training camp. The May 28 warm-up against Ireland ended 1-0 to the hosts. Qatar couldn’t equalise despite Ireland going down to ten men after half-time. Almoez Ali was sent off late in the match. Across their last ten matches, Qatar recorded just one win and failed to score in five. A warm-up against El Salvador on June 6 offered minimal preparation for Switzerland on June 13. The competitive rust is real, and it all circles back to whether Afif can generate enough on his own.
In the 2025-26 Qatar Stars League, Afif scored 14 goals and provided 12 assists in 22 appearances for Al-Sadd, a goal involvement of 1.27 per 90 minutes. In Qatar’s entire AFC World Cup qualifying campaign, he provided 11 assists in 16 appearances, more than any other player across the confederation. His 2023 AFC Asian Cup, 8 goals, a hat-trick in the final, Golden Boot, and MVP, confirmed he performs on the big stage. He holds 40 international goals, 50 assists, and 127 caps. No other player in Qatar’s squad operates near that level.
| Match | Opponent | Afif Played | Goals | Result |
| AFC 3R, Sep 2024 | UAE | Yes | 1-0 | W 1-0 |
| AFC 3R, Oct 2024 | Kyrgyzstan | Yes | 0-0 | D 0-0 |
| AFC 3R, Nov 2024 | Uzbekistan | Yes | 3-2 | W 3-2 |
| AFC 4R, Oct 8 2025 | Oman | Yes | 0-0 | D 0-0 |
| AFC 4R, Oct 14 2025 | UAE (qualifier) | Yes | 2-1 (2A) | W 2-1 |
June 13 against Switzerland in Santa Clara is the toughest opener Qatar could face. Switzerland is ranked 17th and has conceded just seven goals in eight UEFA qualifying matches, built on defensive compactness. Afif’s dribbling and direct carrying are the primary tools for creating space that Qatar’s build-up cannot generate alone. June 18 against Canada in Vancouver puts him against Jesse Marsch’s high press, designed to compress time on the ball before wide players build momentum. Afif’s ability to retain possession under pressure and release quickly is what separates him from every other Qatar option. June 24 against Bosnia in Seattle is the match Qatar needs to arrive at still in contention. If they do, Afif produced in the first two.
The approach across all three opponents is the same: reduce the space between Qatar’s wide players and the backline, overload Afif’s position with man-oriented pressing. Switzerland’s compact midfield concedes under one goal per qualifying game. Canada’s press wins the ball before it reaches dangerous areas. Bosnia will likely double-mark him in a back-five. Afif’s advantage against all three is his reading of half-space opportunities and his dribbling under pressure, the same qualities that produced 11 qualifying assists and eight goals at the 2023 Asian Cup. He won’t have space handed to him. He has to manufacture it.
At the 2022 World Cup, Qatar lost all three group-stage games, scored one goal, and became the first host nation to be eliminated without a win. In 2026, they qualified on merit, but only just, fourth in the third round before winning a two-match fourth-round group. One win in ten recent matches tells the story of a squad that cannot produce without its best player in form. The Qatar FIFA World Cup 2026 Group B Akram Afif equation is unchanged across all three June fixtures: one decisive contribution per match is the minimum this squad needs from him.
Stay updated on every twist and turn of the summer transfer window and catch all the live football action with Sports Live Hub (SLH).
Accessing a high-quality hub sports live stream is essential for fans following the matches of the World Cup season. SLH provides a verified directory of official broadcasting partners, ensuring you never miss a moment of the action from the Premier League or Liga Portugal or World Cup.
Our sport hub live streaming dashboard offers real-time tactical overlays, player fitness stats, and live transfer probability tickers. As the WC 2026 saga develops, SLH is the destination for integrated sports data and high-definition viewing.
If you are wondering how to watch Sports live for free, SLH maintains a curated list of official free-to-air (FTA) broadcasters and legitimate digital promotional windows. We help fans find legal, cost-free ways to enjoy global sports while ensuring safety from unauthorized streaming sites.
Who is Qatar’s best player at the 2026 World Cup?
Akram Afif, two-time Asian Player of the Year with 40 goals, 50 assists, and 127 caps. He provided 11 qualifying assists, more than any AFC player.
What group is Qatar in at the FIFA World Cup 2026?
Qatar is in Group B with Canada, Bosnia, and Switzerland. Fixtures are June 13 vs Switzerland, June 18 vs Canada, and June 24 vs Bosnia.
Has Qatar ever won a game at the FIFA World Cup?
No, Qatar lost all three games at the 2022 World Cup, the first host nation eliminated without a win. They scored just one goal across the tournament.
What are Qatar’s chances of qualifying from Group B?
Qatar (51st) faces Switzerland (17th) and Canada (27th), making progression difficult. A win against Bosnia (71st) is their best route, with the top eight third-placed teams also advancing.
Who is Qatar’s coach at the FIFA World Cup 2026?
Qatar is coached by Julen Lopetegui, appointed in May 2025. The former Spain and Real Madrid manager takes charge of Qatar in his first tournament.
cricket
football
4 hours ago

5 hours ago

6 hours ago