Group B may not carry the global star power of some other sections, but it has the ingredients to become one of the tournament’s most competitive groups. Co-host Canada gets three group-stage matches in front of home crowds and enters with expectations unlike any previous World Cup appearance. Switzerland arrives as the most proven tournament team in the group. Qatar returns after the disappointment of hosting in 2022 and now qualifies on merit, while Bosnia and Herzegovina returns to the World Cup stage after more than a decade away carrying the unpredictability that often makes groups uncomfortable. Group B will be played from June 12 through June 24.
Canada enters with arguably the most pressure of any co-host outside Mexico. This is not simply about participating. The expectation internally is to reach the knockout stage for the first time in program history after returning to the World Cup in 2022 and reaching the Copa América semifinal under Jesse Marsch in 2024. Canada has never won a World Cup match, which turns the opener against Bosnia and Herzegovina into one of the most important matches in national team history. Jonathan David gives Canada a reliable goalscoring outlet, while Tajon Buchanan remains one of the most dangerous transition players in the squad. There is some concern surrounding injuries entering the tournament, including uncertainty around Alphonso Davies’ condition and the confirmed absence of Marcelo Flores after suffering an ACL injury.
Switzerland may not generate headlines, but this group sets up extremely well for them. Murat Yakin’s side arrives unbeaten through qualification and continues one of the most quietly impressive World Cup runs among European nations, qualifying for six consecutive tournaments. The Swiss have reached the round of 16 repeatedly but have not broken through to a quarterfinal in more than seven decades. That history creates an interesting psychological angle because this team looks experienced enough to finally push deeper. Granit Xhaka remains the leader, Manuel Akanji anchors the defense, and players like Dan Ndoye and Noah Okafor give Switzerland more pace and directness than previous editions of the team. Defensively, Switzerland conceded only two goals in qualification, and that stability usually translates well into group-stage football.
Bosnia and Herzegovina may be the hardest team in the group to project. This is only their second World Cup appearance after debuting in 2014, but the qualification story itself changed expectations around the program. Former captain Sergej Barbarez took over and rebuilt the squad with a stronger identity and a new generation around veteran leadership. Edin Džeko remains the emotional center of the team despite being 40 years old entering the tournament, while younger pieces such as Kerim Alajbegovic represent the next phase. Bosnia plays with intensity, quick transitions and an aggressive defensive approach that can create problems for teams expecting a slower tempo. Their opening match against Canada feels enormous because a result there would completely change the group.
Qatar enters in a very different position than four years ago. In 2022 they hosted and failed to earn a point. This time they arrive having qualified through competition and carrying momentum from winning the 2023 Asian Cup. Julen Lopetegui’s arrival has brought more structure, while Akram Afif and Almoez Ali remain the players capable of changing matches. Preparation has not been ideal after disruptions to scheduled friendlies, but Qatar’s continuity and chemistry still make them dangerous in a balanced group.
The match that could define everything comes on June 24 when Canada faces Switzerland. Canada has the emotion, pace and home support. Switzerland has the experience and defensive reliability. That game feels like a likely battle for first place.
Projected Group Finish
- Switzerland
- Canada
- Bosnia and Herzegovina
- Qatar
Key Match: Switzerland vs. Canada
Dark Horse: Bosnia and Herzegovina
Prediction: Switzerland’s experience earns first place, but Canada finally gets its breakthrough moment and reaches the knockout stage for the first time.

