đź“… June 25, 2026 | By Pulse India News Desk
Japan face Sweden in a crucial final Group F match at Dallas Stadium, with both teams chasing very different targets. Japan have already qualified for the Round of 32 but still have a chance to fight for top spot, while Sweden need a result to strengthen their knockout hopes.
Hajime Moriyasu’s side arrive with confidence after their commanding win over Tunisia, while Graham Potter’s Sweden must respond after defensive problems were exposed in a heavy defeat to the Netherlands.
Match Details
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Match | Japan vs Sweden |
| Tournament | FIFA World Cup 2026 |
| Group | Group F |
| Date | June 25, 2026 / June 26, 2026 IST |
| Kick-off | 4:30 AM IST, June 26 |
| Venue | Dallas Stadium, AT&T Stadium, Arlington, Texas |
| Prediction | Japan 2-1 Sweden |
Group F Standings Before Japan vs Sweden
| Pos | Team | Pld | W | D | L | GF | GA | GD | Pts | Status |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Netherlands | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 7 | 3 | +4 | 4 | Qualified |
| 2 | Japan | 2 | 1 | 1 | 0 | 6 | 2 | +4 | 4 | Qualified |
| 3 | Sweden | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 | 6 | 6 | 0 | 3 | Knockout Contender |
| 4 | Tunisia | 2 | 0 | 0 | 2 | 1 | 9 | -8 | 0 | Eliminated |
Group Scenario: Japan are already through but need a strong result to challenge Netherlands for first place. Sweden can significantly improve their Round of 32 chances with a win or draw, while defeat would leave them dependent on third-place rankings.
Predicted Starting XIs
| Position | Japan XI – 3-4-2-1 | Sweden XI – 3-5-2 / 3-4-1-2 |
|---|---|---|
| Goalkeeper | Zion Suzuki | Kristoffer Nordfeldt |
| Defenders | Takehiro Tomiyasu, Ko Itakura, Hiroki Ito | Victor Lindelöf, Isak Hien, Gustaf Lagerbielke |
| Midfielders | Ritsu Doan, Kodai Sano, Ao Tanaka, Keito Nakamura | Alexander Bernhardsson, Yasin Ayari, Jesper Karlström, Benjamin Nygren, Gabriel Gudmundsson |
| Attackers | Junya Ito, Daichi Kamada; Ayase Ueda | Viktor Gyökeres, Alexander Isak |
Japan Team Analysis
Fluid Possession And Disciplined Defensive Shape
Japan are expected to continue with the same structure that produced a dominant result against Tunisia. Their 3-4-2-1 system gives them defensive stability while allowing quick rotations between midfield and attack.
Takehiro Tomiyasu anchors the back three, while Ko Itakura and Hiroki Ito help Japan build from deep. In midfield, Ao Tanaka and Kodai Sano will focus on tempo control and quick ball circulation.
With Takefusa Kubo still out due to a knee injury, Daichi Kamada becomes the creative centre of the team. His ability to connect with Junya Ito, Ritsu Doan and Keito Nakamura could decide Japan’s attacking rhythm.
Sweden Team Analysis
Direct Threat But Defensive Questions
Sweden have serious attacking power through Alexander Isak and Viktor Gyökeres, but their defensive structure remains a major concern after the heavy defeat against the Netherlands.
Graham Potter’s side will likely use a wing-back system to stretch Japan and create crossing lanes into the front two. Yasin Ayari and Jesper Karlström must protect central areas and prevent Japan from controlling short passing exchanges.
Sweden’s route to victory depends on direct transitions. If they can win the ball and release Isak or Gyökeres quickly, they can trouble Japan’s back three. But if the game becomes stretched, Japan’s movement could expose Sweden again.
Japan Formation
Formation: 3-4-2-1
Sweden Formation
Formation: 3-5-2 / 3-4-1-2
Key Tactical Battles
Daichi Kamada vs Sweden’s Midfield Block: Kamada will be the main creative force in Kubo’s absence. Sweden must stop him from receiving between the lines.
Ayase Ueda vs Isak Hien: Ueda enters in strong form after his brace against Tunisia. His movement behind the defence could trouble Sweden’s backline.
Alexander Isak & Viktor Gyökeres vs Japan Back Three: Sweden’s biggest hope lies in quick direct attacks through their two elite forwards.
Japan’s Wide Rotations vs Sweden Wing-Backs: Japan will look to overload wide areas through Doan, Nakamura, Junya Ito and Kamada, forcing Sweden’s wing-backs into constant defensive work.
Head-to-Head Record
| Metric | Record |
|---|---|
| Total World Cup Matches | 0 |
| Japan Wins | 0 |
| Sweden Wins | 0 |
| Draws | 0 |
| Competitive History | First-ever senior World Cup meeting |
Win Probability
Japan: 50% | Draw: 27.9% | Sweden: 23.7%
Japan are slight favourites because of their defensive discipline, technical midfield structure and recent attacking rhythm. Sweden remain dangerous through Isak and Gyökeres, but their defensive issues make this a difficult matchup.
Final Prediction
Sweden’s direct attacking quality should create dangerous moments, but Japan look more balanced across the pitch. Moriyasu’s side have the defensive discipline to manage Sweden’s long-ball threat and the technical quality to punish spaces in transition.
Best Pick: Japan Win or Draw
Key Player: Daichi Kamada
Sweden Danger Man: Alexander Isak
Match Stakes: Japan chasing top spot, Sweden chasing knockout security


