Soccer-Poland seek to end 96-year drought in Sweden in playoff final


Soccer Football - World Cup - UEFA Qualifiers - Group G - Poland v Netherlands - PGE Narodowy, Warsaw, Poland - November 14, 2025 Poland coach Jan Urban before the match REUTERS/Kacper Pempel/ File Photo

March 30 (Reuters) - Poland enter Tuesday’s World ⁠Cup playoff final against Sweden seeking to end a winless run on Swedish soil that ⁠stretches back nearly a century.

The match at the sold-out Strawberry Arena in Solna is ‌a winner-takes-all clash for a place in the tournament finals in North America and for Poland, it offers a chance to end a dismal sequence of results, having not won in Sweden since a 3-0 friendly victory in Stockholm in 1930.

Since ​then, Poland have endured eight losses and two draws in Sweden.

"It ⁠depends on whether we look at ⁠the statistics," Poland coach Jan Urban told reporters earlier in the week when asked if the winless ⁠streak ‌would have an impact on Tuesday's match. "Apparently, it has been nearly 100 years since we won a match in Sweden. This will be a completely different encounter."

While Sweden hold the historical ⁠edge, Poland can draw confidence from more recent events.

The two ​nations met in the 2022 ‌World Cup playoffs, with Poland earning a 2-0 victory at home in Chorzow to secure ⁠their spot in Qatar.

SWEDEN ​HIT FORM

After a disappointing qualifying campaign, Sweden are showing signs of improvement under new coach Graham Potter, beating Ukraine 3-1 in their playoff semi-final while Poland fought to a2-1 win over Albania.

"On paper, Sweden are the strongest ⁠team in this bracket," Urban told reporters on Monday. "Potter’s team ​confirmed their quality against Ukraine, but many unknowns remain. We don't yet know how they will behave in a more difficult scenario - for example, if they are trailing."

The match could mark the end of an ⁠era for Poland’s experienced core.

Captain Robert Lewandowski, 37, has indicated he is approaching the final stage of his career, while midfielder Piotr Zielinski, 31, remains a key figure.

“I'm not afraid to end my career because I'm starting to prepare for it, to prepare things I can do after football,” Lewandowski said ​in January. “I know it's a very important part of my life, but ⁠it's not everything.”

Failure to qualify would likely trigger an immediate overhaul of the national side, signalling the ​end for a generation that made Poland a fixture at major ‌tournaments.

"The World Cup is the most important tournament ​in every footballer's career. Tomorrow we'll play a decisive match to fulfil our dreams and write more history," winger Jakub Kaminski said.

(Reporting by Tommy Lund in GdanskEditing by Toby Davis)

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