Bosnia-Herzegovina moved to the verge of the World Cup knockout phase with a 3-1 victory over Qatar at Seattle Stadium, a result that almost secures third place in Group B and leaves Sergej Barbarez’s team very likely to reach the round of 32 as one of the best third-placed sides.
The match swung on a dominant first-half spell in which Bosnia-Herzegovina struck twice from distance and forced an own goal, while Qatar replied through Hassan Al Haydos before the break, but a late strike from substitute Ermin Mahmic closed out the World Cup contest and calmed Bosnian nerves.
This win ended a sequence of seven international fixtures without victory for Bosnia-Herzegovina and placed the team on the brink of progressing beyond the World Cup group stage
for the first time, after exiting at the opening phase in 2014, although confirmation of qualification will depend on other Group B results.
That 2014 campaign came when Kerim Alajbegovic was only six, yet the 18-year-old now stands at the centre of Bosnia-Herzegovina’s World Cup story after scoring in this match and becoming the eighth-youngest scorer in tournament history at 18 years and 276 days, highlighting the shift between the two generations.
Alajbegovic’s goal in Seattle carried extra significance, as the long-range strike made the midfielder the youngest player on record to score a World Cup goal from outside the penalty area, beating Kylian Mbappe’s mark from 2018, when Mbappe achieved his statistic at 19 years and 207 days.
There was another landmark for Alajbegovic, who became only the third player aged 18 or under this century to appear in all three group games for a European nation at a World Cup, joining Spain’s Gavi in 2022 and Russia’s Dmitri Sychev in 2002, underlining Bosnia-Herzegovina’s faith in youthful talent.
| Player | Nation | World Cup | Age | Notable record |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kerim Alajbegovic | Bosnia-Herzegovina | 2026 | 18y 276d | Youngest scorer from outside box |
| Kylian Mbappe | France | 2018 | 19y 207d | Previous record holder from distance |
World Cup group clash: key moments against Qatar
Bosnia-Herzegovina seized control from kick-off, firing five efforts from outside the area during the opening 23 minutes, and that pressure told in the 29th minute when Alajbegovic unleashed a fierce strike from range that arrowed into Mahmoud Abunada’s right-hand corner to open the World Cup scoring.
The advantage quickly doubled when a dangerous Bosnia-Herzegovina attack forced Abunada into an own goal five minutes later, and Qatar’s defence looked shaken as Edin Dzeko soon rattled the post, though the match changed before the interval when Hassan Al Haydos converted from close range on 42 minutes.
The first half almost became level shortly afterwards as Pedro Miguel crashed an effort against the woodwork for Qatar, raising noise among their travelling fans, while after the restart Akram Afif threatened an equaliser by drilling into the side netting from a narrow angle, but Bosnia-Herzegovina survived that World Cup pressure.
Victory for Bosnia and Herzegovina! #FIFAWorldCupFIFA World Cup (@FIFAWorldCup) June 24, 2026
During much of the second half, Julen Lopetegui’s Qatar side enjoyed more territory and possession but struggled to seriously trouble Nikola Vasilj, who did not face a shot on target until Miguel tried from distance in stoppage time, by which stage Bosnia-Herzegovina had already tightened their World Cup grip.
World Cup impact of Mahmic and Bosnia-Herzegovina’s substitutes
The turning point late on came from the bench, as Esmir Bajraktarevic finally registered Bosnia-Herzegovina’s first attempt of the second period in the 79th minute, drawing a parry from Abunada before Qatar failed to clear the resulting corner, allowing substitute Ermin Mahmic to finish and secure the World Cup result.
Super subs have shaped this World Cup, and Mahmic is now among three players with multiple goals as a substitute at the tournament, alongside Deniz Undav on three and Johan Manzambi on two, and Mahmic’s second strike at these finals also makes the forward Bosnia-Herzegovina’s top World Cup scorer.
Although Bosnia-Herzegovina cannot yet be mathematically sure of progress, the 3-1 success over Qatar, the end of a seven-game winless sequence, the emergence of Alajbegovic and Mahmic’s scoring run together present a strong platform, leaving the team confident that this World Cup campaign is likely to extend beyond Group B.













