World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
After two group stage matches, Senegal has conceded 6 goals. They lost 1 3 to France and 2 3 to Norway, earning zero points with a goal difference of 3.
After two group stage matches, Senegal has conceded 6 goals. They lost 1-3 to France and 2-3 to Norway, earning zero points with a goal difference of -3.
Iraq's situation is even worse. They lost 1-4 to Norway and 0-3 to France, scoring 1 goal and conceding 7, with a goal difference of -6.
Both teams sit at the bottom of Group I, zero points each, -3 against -6 in goal difference. At Toronto's BMO Field on June 26, don't expect any tactical masterclass—this is a simple arithmetic problem. Opta gives Senegal a 56.62% chance of advancing, barely better than a coin flip. Senegal must win, and by at least two goals, then leave their fate to results in other groups. For Iraq to climb out of the -6 hole, it would take nothing short of a miracle.
Senegal coach Pape Thiaw was blunt before the game: "Time is running out." He called this match a "final."
But this final lacks the necessary gravitas. Goalkeeper Edouard Mendy is injured, replaced by Mory Diaw. Mendy was Senegal's last line of defense; without him, an already twice-broken backline is completely exposed. Iraq is also hobbled, with striker Ayman Hussein out. He scored Iraq's first World Cup goal in 40 years against Norway and was the focal point of their counterattacks—without him, Iraq's counters rely on hopeful long balls from the back.
Senegal's captain Kalidou Koulibaly is also a mess. One major French sports newspaper reported he was dropped for Abdoulaye Seck, while another article quoted Thiaw as saying the captain is fit and can play. Until kickoff, no one can definitively say if he'll play. The captain's armband might end up on an empty sleeve. Ibrahim Mbaye and Habib Diarra are pushed into the starting lineup. Thiaw is making changes in desperation, like a gambler pushing his last chips onto the table.
The few people on the bench are even more unsettling than those on the field. Key figures from the 2002 World Cup quarterfinal run—Diouf, Tony Sylva, Lamine Diatta—now hold important roles in the national team setup: Sylva handles goalkeeper training, Diatta is team manager, and Diouf is a board advisor for the football association. Those old-school legends watch the younger generation on the pitch, their stares intense enough to burn the grass. Thiaw has publicly asked the current players to "surpass the achievements of 2002." Senegal won the 2021 Africa Cup of Nations and has reached four finals, so the pedigree is there. But the reality is that South Africa reached the knockout stage for the first time, Morocco achieved a big win, and Ivory Coast escaped the group of death. This week, other African teams are celebrating, while the African Cup holders are left calculating goal differences.
Toronto's BMO Field, expanded to hold over 40,000, is a neutral venue. Both teams' diaspora communities won't fill the stands; there's no home advantage, no crowd to drown players' ears in jeers. The atmosphere will likely be tepid.
Thiaq admits the team's current predicament is "surprising," while Iraq coach Arnold has vowed to "shock the world." Two men on the brink of elimination trading tough talk sounds like desperate rambling before the end.
Kickoff is at 3 PM local time, 9 PM Paris time. Some hope to calculate a way out; others just hope not to lose too badly. Once the whistle blows, no calculator can save anyone.