Soccer-Sweden smash five past Tunisia in World Cup opener


Soccer Football - FIFA World Cup 2026 - Group F - Sweden v Tunisia - Estadio Monterrey, Monterrey, Mexico - June 14, 2026 Sweden's Mattias Svanberg celebrates scoring their fourth goal with teammates following a VAR check REUTERS/Henry Romero

MONTERREY, Mexico, June 14 (Reuters) - Sweden's Yasin Ayari scored two sensational ⁠goals and Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyokeres also got on the scoresheet as they cruised to a 5-1 World Cup Group F victory over Tunisia ⁠on Sunday.

After scraping through to the finals after a dismal qualifying campaign, they responded by scoring five goals in a World Cup match for ‌the first time since 1938 when they defeated Cuba 8-0.

Ayari – the son of a Tunisian father and a Moroccan mother – put Sweden ahead in the seventh minute after goalkeeper Mouhib Chamakh fluffed his lines trying to clear under pressure from Isak, and what followed set the tone for the evening.

The ball fell to Gyokeres, whose shot was blocked, but Ayari picked up the loose ball and blasted home a rocket of ​a shot to send the yellow-clad fans in the stands into raptures, though the player's own celebrations ⁠were more muted.

Set up to defend and hit Sweden on the ⁠break, Tunisia then got a taste of their own medicine as they committed players forward and chased an equaliser on the half-hour mark, only to come undone on ⁠the ‌counterattack.

The Swedes won the ball in their own box and played it to Gyokeres, who took it on his chest and instantly released Isak down the left. The striker ran at defender Montassar Talbi before cutting inside and slotting the ball past Chamakh, who should have done better.

The Tunisians did little in the opening half ⁠and struggled to recalibrate their game-plan after going behind, butthey still managed to pull a goal ​back before the break, defender Omar Rekik scoring with ‌a superb glancing header that was his side's first effort on target.

MISCUES

Isak and Gyokeres have both proven to be fearsome forwards individually but there were ⁠a number of miscues early ​in the second half as they struggled to play on the same wavelength.

They eventuallyclicked again on the hour mark when Isak stolethe ball from Ellyes Skhiri and teed up his strike partner to make it 3-1 with a simple finish,and Gyokeres could have added a couple more to his total with some better finishing.

Substitute Mattias Svanberg scored straight after coming off the bench in the 84th ⁠minute, and though the goal was initially disallowed for offside, it was allowed to stand ​after a VAR review.

Ayari then closed the show in stoppage time with another wonder strike, firing a thunderous shot from outside the box that Chamakh was powerless to stop.

This time the midfielder celebrated with abandon as Swedenwent to the topof Group F on three points ahead of Japan and the Netherlands, who drew 2-2 earlier.

"It's football, so you know anything can ⁠happen, especially at 2-1, but I thought the boys played with a stability and a calmness throughout the game," Sweden coach Graham Potter said.

"Obviously, when you concede, there's always a danger that you get emotional and you forget what you're meant to do but the boys did it well, and we always thought that, if we could stay solid and compact and defend well, we've got two guys up front that can hurt them, and I think we offered that threat all night, really."

Potter was effusive in his ​praise for Isak and Gyokeres, despite their occasionally scrappy interplay.

"They haven't played that much together, so it's going to get ⁠better, I think, the more they play. I thought they worked well for each other, worked hard. It's nice for them to score goals, this convinces them that they are on ​the right path, but I thought they were both fantastic."

After not conceding a single goal in qualifying, it ‌was a sobering night for Tunisia's defence.

"It's a difficult loss. It's painful. Starting the ​competition with this bad of a loss is indeed difficult," coach Sabri Lamouchi told reporters.

"We made too many mistakes, and this is not something that we can do. We are shooting ourselves in the foot, we are hurting ourselves."

(Reporting by Hatem Maher and Philip O'ConnorEditing by Christian Radnedge and Peter Rutherford)

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