Sweden 3 – 2 Poland
Strawberry Arena • Attendance: 49,627
A. Elanga
Assist: Y. Ayari
20′
GOAL 1-0
GOAL 1-1
33′
N. Zalewski
Assist: Zieliński
Lagerbielke
Assist: Nygren
44′
GOAL 2-1
GOAL 2-2
55′
K. Swiderski
VAR Confirmed
V. Gyoekeres
Assist: B. Zeneli
88′
GOAL 3-2
First Half Summary
Despite Poland controlling 58% of the ball, Sweden struck first in the 20th minute when Anthony Elanga finished a move initiated by Ayari. Poland’s pressure finally told in the 33rd minute as Nicola Zalewski leveled with a brilliant individual effort. However, against the run of play, Gustaf Lagerbielke headed home in the 44th minute to give Sweden a lead at the break, surviving a late scare where Kristoffer Nordfeldt had to make a crucial save against Kaminski.
Second Half Summary
The drama intensified in the 55th minute when Karol Swiderski equalized; the goal was only confirmed after a tense VAR review. Poland continued to dominate possession (64%), but Sweden’s substitutions changed the tide. In the 88th minute, after Zeneli hit the post, Viktor Gyoekeres pounced on the loose ball to secure the win. The match ended in a flurry of yellow cards and tactical shifts as Sweden withstood 4 minutes of stoppage time to seal the victory.
Final Possession: Sweden 36% – 64% Poland
🖥️
VAR Review
57′ Goal Stand Confirmation
After Karol Swiderski found the net in the 55th minute, play was halted for a significant review. The VAR officials checked for a potential offside in the buildup involving Jakub Kaminski. After a two-minute deliberation, the goal was officially awarded, bringing the score to 2-2.
Match Narrative
The story of the night was efficiency over volume. Poland dictated the tempo for nearly the entire match, completing hundreds more passes than the hosts. However, Sweden’s defense, anchored by Victor Lindelof (who made multiple crucial interceptions), absorbed the pressure.
The introduction of Besfort Zeneli and Lucas Bergvall in the 69th minute proved masterstroke. Zeneli hit the post in the 88th minute, but it was Viktor Gyoekeres who reacted quickest to the loose ball, securing a win that sends the 49,627 fans at Strawberry Arena home in celebration.
| Sweden |
Metric |
Poland |
| 36% |
Possession |
64% |
| 5 |
Shots on Target |
7 |
| 2 |
Corner Kicks |
9 |
| 12 |
Crosses |
24 |
| 15 |
Fouls |
15 |
| 2 |
Yellow Cards |
3 |
| 5 |
Goalkeeper Saves |
2 |
💡
Defensive Masterclass: Despite Poland attempting 24 crosses and earning 9 corners, Sweden’s Kristoffer Nordfeldt made 5 crucial saves to keep the hosts in the lead. Sweden’s clinical finishing (3 goals from 5 shots on target) ultimately won the day against Poland’s dominant 64% possession.
🇸🇪 Sweden
3-4-2-1
Goalkeeper
23. Kristoffer Nordfeldt
Defense
Lagerbielke • Starfelt • Lindelöf • Svensson
Midfield
Yasin Ayari • Jesper Karlstrom • Gudmundsson
Attack
Elanga • Nygren • Gyökeres
Coach: Graham Potter
🇵🇱 Poland
3-4-2-1
Goalkeeper
1. Kamil Grabara
Defense
Kiwior • Bednarek • Wisniewski • Matty Cash
Midfield
Zalewski • Zieliński • Szymański
Attack
Lewandowski • Kaminski • Świderski
Coach: Jan Urban
Key Tactical Changes
69′ Sweden: Lucas Bergvall ↑ IN
69′ Sweden: Besfort Zeneli ↑ IN
63′ Poland: Oskar Pietuszewski ↑ IN
90′ Poland: Krzysztof Piątek ↑ IN
UEFA Play-off Path B
SWEDEN QUALIFIED
Finalists for FIFA World Cup 2026™
The Path to North America
Semi-Final Ukraine 1 – 3 Sweden
Semi-Final Poland 2 – 1 Albania
Path B Final (Solna)
Sweden 3 – 2 Poland
World Cup Group F Lineup
| 1 |
🇳🇱 Netherlands |
| 2 |
🇯🇵 Japan |
| 3 |
🇹🇳 Tunisia |
| 4 |
🇸🇪 Sweden (Via Play-offs) |
Poland, despite finishing 2nd in Group G with 17 points, fails to qualify for the World Cup for the first time since 2014.