Gyokeres Fires Sweden Past Ukraine as World Cup Dreams Fade Again

Another FIFA World Cup will pass without Ukraine. It has become a painful pattern — one briefly interrupted only once, two decades ago. Since then, generations have changed and managers have come and gone, yet the outcome remains the same: when the world’s biggest football stage arrives, Ukrainian fans are left watching from home.
Heading into the decisive play-off clash, Serhiy Rebrov stressed that character would be the defining factor. Illia Zabarnyi spoke of “huge responsibility.” But on the pitch, those words quickly rang hollow. As early as the sixth minute, Viktor Gyokeres struck the first blow — the beginning of a devastating hat-trick that exposed Ukraine’s fragility.
The first half offered glimpses rather than substance. Vitaliy Mykolenko delivered a dangerous cross that nearly forced an own goal, while at the other end, Viktor Gyokeres’s teammate threatened after escaping Yukhym Konoplya, only to miss the target. But overall, the pattern was clear: Sweden had already done the damage early, while Ukraine controlled possession without purpose or cutting edge.
There was hope that the second half might bring a response, as has often been the case in the past, when Ukraine rediscovered their fighting spirit after the break. Not this time. Instead, Sweden emerged sharper, hungrier, and far more dangerous, creating chances with alarming regularity.
The second goal arrived in the 51st minute and effectively sealed the contest. Viktor Gyokeres capitalised on a costly error from Illia Zabarnyi, coolly beating Valeriy Bondar before slotting into the corner. At 0-2, the outcome already felt inevitable.
To their credit, Ukraine did muster a couple of half-chances. Viktor Tsygankov had an opportunity from close range, but his effort lacked the power to trouble Robin Olsen, who dealt with it comfortably.
The final blow came in the 71st minute. Viktor Gyokeres surged past Illia Zabarnyi in midfield and raced through on goal, only to be brought down by Anatoliy Trubin. The striker kept his composure, converting the penalty to complete a superb hat-trick and underline his dominance.
From that point on, the intensity faded. Sweden began to look ahead to the play-off final, while Ukraine showed little more than a faint desire to avoid a heavy defeat. A late goal from Matviy Ponomarenko offered a small consolation, but it did little to change the broader narrative.
The 1-3 scoreline tells only part of the story. What follows will likely be familiar: apologies, reflections, and promises to improve. Yet the harsh reality remains — Ukraine end another qualification cycle with a performance defined by a lack of resilience and identity. And once again, hope is deferred to the next campaign.
FIFA World Cup 2026, Qualifiers
Ukraine - Sweden 1:3 (0:1)
Goals: Gyökeres, 6 (0:1); Gyökeres, 51 (0:2); Gyökeres, 73 (penalty) (0:3); Ponomarenko M., 90 (1:3)
Ukraine: Trubin; Bondar V.; Zabarnyi; Mykolenko; Tymchyk; Tsygankov; Sudakov (Ponomarenko M., 77); Yarmoliuk (Shaparenko, 85); Kaliuzhnyi (Hutsuliak, 60); Vanat (Yaremchuk, 60); Zubkov (Ocheretko, 60)
Substitution: Ocheretko (from 60); Hutsuliak (from 60); Yaremchuk (from 60); Ponomarenko M. (from 77); Shaparenko (from 85)
Bench: Neshcheret; Riznyk D.; Svatok; Sarapiy; Mikhaylichenko B.; Voloshyn N.; Pikhalonok
Yellow Cards: Tymchyk 57; Trubin 72
Sweden: Nordfeldt; Lagerbielke; Lindelöf; Hien (Starfelt, 37); Gudmundsson G. (Svensson D., 77); Johansson H.; Ayari (Bergvall, 77); Karlstrom; Elanga (Svanberg, 94); Nygren; Gyökeres
Substitution: Starfelt (from 37); Svensson D. (from 77); Bergvall (from 77); Svanberg (from 94)
Bench: Törnqvist N.; Ellborg; Smith E.; Larsson Hu.; Bardagji; Ali; Zeneli B.; Nilsson G.
