Today, we move on to 5th team in this series. We cover Bosnia and Herzegovina today. This one is again covered by me. When 21-year-old Esmir Bajraktarević, a kid born in Wisconsin stepped up to bury the decisive penalty against Italy in the UEFA playoffs, it sparked scenes of absolute pandemonium in Zenica. Against all odds, the four-time world champions were out, and Bosnia and Herzegovina had booked their ticket to only their second-ever World Cup. To say this qualification was unexpected is a massive understatement. Prior to this playoff run, the Zmajevi (Dragons) had won just four of their previous 19 matches across two miserable qualification cycles. But following a chaotic, emotionally charged campaign, they are heading to North America riding a wave of diaspora energy and pure, unadulterated vibes. About Nickname: Zmajevi (The Dragons) FIFA Ranking: 64th Manager: Sergej Barbarez Captain: Edin Džeko Overview: Bosnia arrives in North America as the ultimate wildcard of Group B. Drawn alongside Canada, Switzerland, and Qatar, they avoided the traditional tournament heavyweights. While their recent form prior to the playoffs was dreadful including a gut-wrenching 97th-minute penalty conceded against Cyprus and a loss to Austria that forced them into the playoff route, they have completely rebuilt their mentality. The squad is a fascinating mix of aging veterans hanging on for one last tournament and highly technical diaspora youth players plucked from across Europe and the United States. Manager: Sergej Barbarez’s appointment in April 2024 is the kind of story you couldn't invent. A former national team captain and absolute cult hero, Barbarez took the job at 52 years old with literally zero prior senior coaching experience. He had spent his retirement playing professional poker before the Bosnian FA finally called him. Barbarez essentially operates as a supreme man-manager and motivator, relying heavily on a backroom staff of former teammates, including sporting director Emir Spahić. He promised honesty and emotional connection over complex tactical dogmatism. While his early matches drew criticism for a lack of results, his ability to unite a fractured dressing room ultimately willed the team through the playoffs. Expected Tactical Approach: Historically a back-three side, Barbarez has shifted the team into a highly compact, combative 4-4-2. Do not expect tiki-taka. Bosnia’s identity is built on aggressive defending, sheer physicality, and direct, vertical transitions. In the first half of their playoff final against Italy, they attempted a staggering 41 long balls, completely bypassing the midfield to hit their target men. Out of possession, they collapse into a low block. Left-back Sead Kolašinac plays a highly disciplined role, frequently tucking inside to form a temporary back-three. This tactical quirk allows Benfica’s Amar Dedić to bomb forward from right-back with complete freedom. In the engine room, physical destroyers like Ivan Šunjić and Benjamin Tahirović do the dirty work, breaking up play and immediately launching the ball forward. The glaring weakness is their high defensive line when they do try to press. Their center-backs lack elite recovery pace, which was brutally exposed by balls over the top during a recent 1-1 warm-up draw against Panama. Key Players Edin Džeko: At 40 years old, the Schalke striker remains the gravitational center of Bosnian football. He top-scored in qualifying with six goals, but his inclusion comes with a massive asterisk. Džeko suffered a severe shoulder subluxation following a heavy tackle by Italy's Davide Frattesi in the playoff final. He missed the final warm-up friendlies, and his match fitness for the grueling summer heat is a major concern. Ermedin Demirović: The Stuttgart forward is the tactical foil to Džeko. He does the tireless, high-intensity pressing and channel running, absorbing the physical punishment so the 40-year-old captain can save his legs for the penalty box. Amar Dedić: The Benfica right-back is arguably the team's most important creative outlet. With Kolašinac tucking in on the left, Dedić provides the primary attacking width and is responsible for delivering early crosses into the box. Sead Kolašinac: The Atalanta veteran is the muscle of the backline. He is the only player besides Džeko remaining from the 2014 World Cup squad. Breakout or Underrated Player Kerim Alajbegović: If you want to look incredibly knowledgeable in the match threads, watch out for this 18-year-old. Developed at FC Köln and Bayer Leverkusen, he was recently snapped up by RB Salzburg, the elegant winger is considered the most naturally gifted Bosnian talent since Miralem Pjanić. Barbarez trusts him so implicitly that he had the teenager taking high-pressure penalties in both the Wales and Italy shootouts, which he buried with ice in his veins. Reasons for Optimism: The group draw is incredibly forgiving, and essentially, they will have home-field advantage. The US boasts a massive Bosnian diaspora St. Louis alone is home to roughly 60,000 Bosnians, featuring a neighborhood dubbed "Little Bosnia". The team recently held a training camp there before heading to Sandy, Utah, surrounded by thousands of passionate fans waving blue-and-yellow flags. The BHFanaticos ultra group will turn matches in Toronto, Los Angeles, and Seattle into deafening, smoke-filled home fixtures. Reasons for Concern: If Džeko cannot play a full 90 minutes, the entire direct 4-4-2 system risks falling apart. Without his unique aerial gravity to occupy opposing center-backs, teams will comfortably squeeze the midfield and exploit Bosnia's slow defense. Furthermore, Barbarez’s lack of tactical experience is a genuine worry; passion and grit got them past Italy, but relying on vibes alone is a dangerous game at a World Cup. Fan Expectations: Supporters are riding an incredible high just to be here. Barbarez openly wept in a press conference, stating his only life dream was just to hear the national anthem at the World Cup. While fans are inherently pessimistic about the federation's historical dysfunction, expectations are grounded but hopeful. Escaping Group B is viewed as a realistic and deeply desired goal. Prediction: They will make Group B an absolute dogfight. Assuming they can squeeze a win out of Qatar and grind out a result against either Canada or Switzerland, they should have enough to advance as a runner-up or one of the best third-place teams. However, their lack of pace at the back and over-reliance on a 40-year-old striker will likely catch up to them in the knockouts. Round of 32 exit.   submitted by   /u/jiraiya--an [link]   [comments]