Senegal saved its best for last.
Facing a must-win match in one of the World Cup’s toughest groups, the Lions of Teranga dismantled Iraq 5-0 on Friday, delivering the kind of emphatic performance that should be enough to punch their ticket to the Round of 32.
There was no drama. No scoreboard watching. Just 90 minutes of relentless attacking football.
Senegal overwhelmed Iraq from the opening whistle, turning every transition into a threat and every defensive mistake into another chance. By the final whistle, the five-goal rout served as both a statement and a reminder that Senegal remains one of Africa’s most dangerous sides on the world stage.
After falling to France and suffering a heartbreaking defeat to Norway earlier in the group stage, Senegal entered Friday needing not only a victory but a convincing one. It got exactly that.
The result likely secures one of the tournament’s coveted knockout spots despite navigating a brutal Group I that featured France, Norway and Iraq. Few groups offered less margin for error, yet Senegal responded when the pressure reached its peak.
Momentum matters in tournament football, and few teams will enter the knockout stage feeling better about themselves than Senegal. A five-goal performance doesn’t just keep a World Cup dream alive—it sends a message to whoever waits on the other side of the bracket.








