World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
World Cup Story Feed / 世界杯事情流
In the opening match of the 2026 World Cup, Qatar, ranked 50th in the FIFA rankings, held Switzerland to a 1 1 draw, securing the first World Cup point in their history. Embolo scored a penalty in the 17th minute, but Switzerland wasted 27 shots throughout the match. In stoppage time, Houshi headed the equalizer — 24 hours later, FIFA changed the call to an own goal by Muhaim. Romano was proven wrong when he posted "Switzerland 1 0" two minutes early, while Yakin angrily stated that they "lost two points." All four teams in Group B have one point each in a deadly start.
94th minute.
Fabrizio Romano's finger had already pressed the send button. The man known for "Here we go" sweeping the global transfer market, this time, with two minutes left before the final whistle, officially announced Switzerland's 1-0 victory.
The next second, Homam Ahmed's left-wing cross flew into the box. Boualem Khoukhi leaped to head the ball in front of Muhaim, the Swiss left-back pinned down and unable to lift his head. The ball struck his head and deflected into the net.
"Here we go" became "Here we edit." Romano updated his post overnight. Qatari players collapsed on the turf, crying. Switzerland went from "winning" to "dropping two points." And Qatar—the team that lost all three group-stage matches at the 2022 home World Cup, cemented as the worst host in history—earned its first-ever World Cup goal and first-ever point.
At Levi's Stadium on June 13, the most magical script for the 2026 World Cup opener unfolded.
If you only watched the first 90 minutes, the script was cliché enough to make you yawn.
In the 17th minute, Qatar goalkeeper Mahmoud Abunada collided with a Swiss player in the box, and the referee pointed to the spot. Breel Donald Embolo converted, giving Switzerland a 1-0 lead. From the scoreboard to possession, shots to corners, the Swiss turned every stat into their own initials.
But football's most valuable stories never happen in the first 90 minutes.
In the 4th minute of stoppage time, Ahmed crossed from the left, and Khoukhi jumped ahead of Muhaim—the 35-year-old center-back powered a textbook header into the top right corner of Gregor Kobel's goal. Kobel had made several stunning saves throughout the match, but for this one, he stood still, watching the ball hit the net.
The slow-motion replay showed the cruel trajectory: the ball first hit Muhaim's head, deflected, changed direction, and rolled inside the post. Muhaim turned, stood frozen, hands on his hips. Khoukhi clenched his fist and roared; the Qatar bench erupted.
The final stats were cold: 68% possession to 32%, 526 passes to 200, 10 corners to 3, 27 shots to 7. Switzerland dominated overwhelmingly. But numbers don't tell you what happened in those final 10 seconds—numbers don't speak, but the ball does.
If this match needed a title, "Shooting Practice" would fit best.
Embolo was the most diligent student. Throughout the game, he touched the ball 11 times inside Qatar's box, more than Qatar's entire team combined (9 times). What does that mean? The Swiss striker touched the ball in the opponent's box more than the entire opponent team. But those 11 touches yielded just 1 goal.
11 touches, 1 goal, 10 fruitless efforts.
Ruben Vargas's close-range shot in the 44th minute epitomized this wasteful display. Qatar's goalkeeper made a world-class save, denying a certain goal. El Mundo captioned it: "Switzerland wastes a 2-0 opportunity into a draw." In other words, Switzerland was a fingertip away from sealing the game, and they pulled that fingertip back.
In the second half, Freiburg's Johann Manzambi picked up the ball outside the box, glanced, and fired a long-range shot. It hit the post and bounced out. A few centimeters short. A difference of less than a centimeter separated a 1-2 score from a 1-1 draw.
Goalkeeper Kobel? He was Switzerland's only saving grace. The Dortmund shot-stopper made several key saves, crucial in preventing Qatar from equalizing by the 60th minute. But a goalkeeper can save once, twice, but not a deflection in the 94th minute.
Qatar had 4 shots on target. That stat might be unremarkable. But for Qatar's historical record, it was their most shots on target in a single World Cup match. In other words, before 2026, they could barely fill one hand with all their shots on target in World Cup history.
Switzerland wasted 27 shots into the California night breeze. Qatar turned 1 of their 4 shots on target into a historic goal. That's football—not who plays better wins, but who's still standing in the 94th minute.
Khoukhi's tears were the most valuable image of this opener.
35 years old, Al Sadd center-back, his career spanning the Algerian and Qatari leagues. Transfermarkt values the veteran at €200,000—a fraction of Embolo's worth, a tiny fraction of world-class defenders like Bape and De Ligt. But this €200,000 defender, in the 94th minute, nailed Switzerland with a header.
German World Cup winner Mats Hummels marveled on Magenta TV: "Khoukhi has 22 national team goals as a center-back; I have only 5." Translation: Dude, you're playing as a defender but scoring like a forward—I'm jealous. A 35-year-old center-back with more international goals than a world champion defender. That's football's absurdity.
Even more dramatic was Qatar's coach on the sideline, Julen Lopetegui.
The 59-year-old Basque was sacked by the Spanish federation on the eve of the 2018 World Cup in Russia—for secretly negotiating a contract with Real Madrid, prompting a player mutiny. Eight years later, to the day, he made his World Cup coaching debut with Qatar. Lopetegui said afterward: "We know how to handle pressure. We didn't panic after falling behind, and it paid off."
Translation: Eight years ago, I was kicked out; eight years later, I took a team everyone looked down on and upended FIFA's 19th-ranked Switzerland.
Behind this calm lies four years of frustration. In the 2022 home World Cup, Qatar lost all three matches—to Ecuador, Senegal, Netherlands—scoring 1 goal and conceding 7, finishing bottom with 0 points. They were the worst host in World Cup history, with doubts ranging from "Why did they host?" to "How can they win?" Four years later, Khoukhi's goal silenced the critics—Lopetegui rarely sprinted onto the field to celebrate, outpacing his players.
At 59, Lopetegui waited eight years for a footnote of redemption.
The real absurdity came 24 hours after the final whistle.
FIFA officially ruled: the equalizer wasn't Khoukhi's goal; it was Muhaim's own goal.
Reason: VAR replay showed Khoukhi's header hit Muhaim and deflected in, changing its trajectory. This means—Qatar's first-ever World Cup goal belongs to a Swiss Hamburg defender on the record book.
The irony is bone-deep. A 35-year-old center-back carried his nation's dignity, and 24 hours later, FIFA told him: Bro, that's the opponent's. Khoukhi's tearful celebration, the Qatari players huddling, Lopetegui's joy—all of it, FIFA reset with a technical ruling.
According to Foot Mercato, citing Asian media, Qatar's FA had prepared about $3 million (around €2.75 million) in bonuses and a luxury car for this "historic goal." Now that the goal's ownership changed, who gets the money—Khoukhi, Muhaim, or will Qatar's FA sue FIFA first?
A night belonging to Qatar was redistributed by a technical ruling. The hero's honor landed in another team's record book. Not even the writers of Yes, Prime Minister would dare write this script.
The atmosphere in Switzerland's locker room could freeze water.
Murat Yakin said after the game: "We dropped two points." Granit Xhaka was more blunt: "We have to change a lot of things." Goalkeeper Gregor Kobel was even more direct: "Extremely bitter."
Three statements, three literal meanings, three subtexts—guys, this World Cup might be doomed.
Yakin admitted the team lacked "precision" and a "killer instinct." Translation: I know the problem, but the players on the pitch can't fix it. As a long-time coach, he packaged his anger as reflection in front of the cameras—nicely wrapped, but unable to hide the anxiety.
Xhaka was more straightforward: Against Qatar, widely considered the "group's weakest opponent," Switzerland delivered 27 shots, 4 big chances, and zero game-sealing finishes. This wasn't an upset; it was suicide. A former Arsenal captain and Leverkusen core, admitting his team must change—from a veteran's mouth, this is harsher than a rookie's tears.
Kobel? The Dortmund shot-stopper made multiple key saves, pivotal in preventing Qatar from equalizing by the 60th minute. But he admitted the team lacked "intensity and desire to win." "Extremely bitter, but I hope this setback comes early." It sounds like comfort, but it's more like despair—a goalkeeper vouching for the entire team's slack.
Switzerland's World Cup script has been written for years: eliminated in the round of 16 in 2022 by Portugal 6-1, with Ronaldo benched watching Gonçalo Ramos score a hat-trick; eliminated in the quarterfinals in 2018 by Sweden; eliminated in extra time in the round of 16 in 2014 by Argentina. Always close, always saying "next time will be better," next time still close.
This time, they can't even use "close." What was missing was a deflection.
This opener also had a subplot—FIFA's new offside detection technology failed on live TV.
The Athletic immediately questioned: Is the offside technology working? TV viewers were left puzzled during Switzerland's goal; VAR footage was unclear, and the offside decision wasn't explained. FIFA's push for tech became a source of doubt in the opener.
In fact, the origin of that penalty itself was controversial. During Switzerland's attack, Freuler seemed to be in an offside position, but FIFA didn't release any images to support the call. In other words, Switzerland's lead was built on a questionable decision.
And Qatar's equalizer also carried doubt: the referee initially awarded the goal, but VAR later changed it to an own goal.
The entire match reeked of "I'm not sure if this is right." FIFA wanted tech to make games fairer, only for the opener to show a "tech unsure of itself" scenario. Switzerland was ultimately felled by a deflection, but every decision leading to that deflection was painted with question marks.
After the first round of Group B, the standings look like this:
Switzerland: 1 point Qatar: 1 point Canada: 1 point Bosnia and Herzegovina: 1 point
All tied. Switzerland plays Bosnia next, Qatar plays Canada. Win and advance, lose and go home—no "close" allowed.
Switzerland is ranked 19th, Qatar 50th, Canada enters as host, Bosnia is a European Championship regular but World Cup newcomer. On paper, Switzerland and Canada are favorites. But football isn't a paper game. Before the opener, who would put Qatar in the conversation for advancement? No one. But they already have 1 point, and the door is open.
What will the Switzerland vs. Bosnia match decide? Yakin's job, Xhaka's international future, Switzerland's fate of exiting in the round of 16 for three consecutive World Cups—can it be broken? If they lose again, Switzerland's 2026 World Cup script is done.
What will the Qatar vs. Canada match decide? Can Lopetegui's Qatar turn "historic" into "habitual"? One upset is a story; two upsets is an era. If Qatar really escapes Group B, the shame of that 0-3 in 2022 will be fully washed away by this 1-1 draw.
And there's that $3 million mystery—FIFA changed the decision, but will the bonus be paid? To whom? Will Muhaim, a Swiss defender, receive a luxury car in Qatar as a "historic own goal" reward? This might be the most absurd sequel to the 2026 World Cup.
Romano has already deleted his post. But his lesson will stick with every journalist wanting to "clock out early":
In football, before the 94th minute, never say it's certain.
In FIFA's record book, never be sure who scored in the 94th minute on the day.
Qatar waited four years for a point; Switzerland spent 90 minutes losing two points; Group B turned itself into a group of death in one match. This is the first lesson the 2026 World Cup opener taught everyone—
The World Cup never follows the script.